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South Korea aims to secure 10,000 GPUs for national AI computing centre

by Stephanie Irvin
in Real Estate
South Korea aims to secure 10,000 GPUs for national AI computing centre
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SOUTH Korea on Monday (Feb 17) announced plans to secure 10,000 high-performance graphics processing units (GPUs) within this year in a bid to keep pace as the global artificial intelligence (AI) race escalates.

“As competition for dominance in the AI industry intensifies, the competitive landscape is shifting from battles between companies to a full-scale rivalry between national innovation ecosystems,” South Korea’s acting President Choi Sang-mok said.

Choi said that the government aims to secure the 10,000 GPUs through public-private cooperation to help the country launch services at its national AI computing centre early.

Last month, the US government announced a new regulation aimed at regulating the flow of American AI chips and technology needed for the most advanced AI applications.

The rule restricts the export of GPUs, specialised processors originally created to accelerate graphics rendering.

The number of GPUs needed for an AI model depends on how advanced the GPU is, how much data is being used to train the model, the size of the model itself and the time the developer wants to spend training it.

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The regulation divides the world into tiers, with South Korea among about 18 countries essentially exempt from the restrictions, while 120 other countries will face caps and countries such as Iran, China and Russia barred completely.

The South Korean government has not yet decided what GPU products to purchase, but details such as budget, GPU models and participating private companies would be finalised by September this year, an official from the Ministry of Science and ICT (information and communications technology) told Reuters.

US chip designer Nvidia, which has seen soaring demand from customers involved in generative AI and accelerated computing for its chips, commands about an 80 per cent share of the global GPU market, far ahead of rivals Intel and AMD.

Meanwhile, Microsoft-backed OpenAI is pushing ahead with its plan to reduce its reliance on Nvidia, Reuters reported last week, for its chip supply by developing its first generation of in-house AI silicon. OpenAI’s popular chatbot ChatGPT is trained and improved on tens of thousands of GPUs.

The ChatGPT maker is finalising the design for its first in-house chip in the next few months and plans to send it for fabrication at Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Reuters reported, citing sources.

The AI race has also been shaken up by the emergence of Chinese startup DeepSeek, using AI models that optimise computational efficiency rather than raw processing power, potentially partly closing the gap between Chinese-made AI processors and more powerful US counterparts. REUTERS

Tags: AimscentrecomputinggpusKoreaNationalSecureSouth
Stephanie Irvin

Stephanie Irvin

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