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Dell reportedly restricts exports of AMD’s fastest gaming GPUs to China — Radeon RX 7900 XTX, RX 7900, Pro W7900 purportedly listed as sanctioned tech

Dell has reportedly issued a Sales Advisory document to ensure that its sales personnel does not sell AMD’s latest Radeon RX 7900-series gaming graphics cards as well as Instinct artificial intelligence (AI) and high-performance computing (HPC) GPUs to China and 22 other countries in compliance with the latest U.S. export rules. However, our quick check of AMD’s consumer GPU specifications reveals that they may not require an export license from the U.S. government, so if the document is legitimate, it could result from a misinterpretation of the new export rules. The report comes on the heels of an export ban on the RTX 4090, Nvidia’s fastest gaming graphics card, that prevents the company from shipping those models to China. 

The advisory includes AMD’s Radeon RX 7900 XT, Radeon RX 7900 XTX, and Radeon Pro W7900 graphics boards (which are among the best graphics cards that exist today), according to an excerpt from the purported Dell document published by WccfTech. In addition, the list of products restricted by Dell itself includes Instinct MI210, MI250, MI250X, and MI300-series datacenter AI and HPC GPUs. We could not verify the legitimacy of the excerpt as of press time, but we have reached out to both AMD and Dell for comment on the matter.  

(Image credit: WccfTech)

Under the latest U.S. export rules for high-performance CPUs and GPUs to China and a variety of other countries, U.S.-based companies (and multinationals) have to obtain an export license from the U.S. Department of Commerce if Total Processing Power (TPP) of their non-datacenter product exceeds 4800 points.

For data center products, the U.S. DoC considers not only TPP but also performance density, and depending on those factors, it may not require an export license at all, require notification about their shipments to China in advance, or demand a company seek an export license (which it will review under the presumption of denial). We published more information about this metric and its impacts here.

(Image credit: U.S. Department of Commerce)

The Total Processing Performance (TPP) score is essentially listed processing power in TFLOPS or TOPS multiplied by the length of operation (e.g., TFLOPS or TOPS ‘8/16/32/64) without sparsity. Performance density is TPP divided by die size in square millimeters.