industrial policy

About this tag
The WindowsForum.com tag 'industrial policy' covers government-led strategies that shape technology markets, particularly around AI hardware and public-sector AI use. Discussions include the U.S. deal requiring Nvidia and AMD to share 15% of China AI chip revenue, which has sparked debate on legality, national security, and market impact. Another thread examines the Welsh Government's use of Microsoft Copilot in a review tied to Industry Wales's closure, highlighting tensions between operational AI benefits and political accountability. These examples show how industrial policy intersects with export controls, corporate strategy, and public-sector governance, affecting aerospace, automotive, and technology sectors.
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    Semiconductor Supply-Chain Risks in 2026: Chokepoints From Design to Packaging

    Semiconductor supply-chain risk in 2026 is no longer a pandemic-era shortage story; it is a structural contest over where advanced chips are designed, fabricated, packaged, shipped, insured, powered, and staffed across a fragmented global production system. The article supplied by BISinfotech...
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    Honam Semiconductor Cluster: Korea’s Chip Policy vs Partisan Politics

    South Korean President Lee Jae Myung on June 28 defended a proposed Honam semiconductor cluster as a national industrial project, rejecting opposition claims that Samsung Electronics and SK hynix investment plans for the southwestern region were politically motivated or technically unrealistic...
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    Wales Copilot Controversy: Unpublished AI Review Fuels Industry Wales Closure Dispute

    The Welsh Government’s use of Microsoft Copilot in a review tied to the closure of Industry Wales has exposed a familiar but still unresolved problem: public-sector AI can be operationally useful and politically explosive at the same time. What makes this case especially consequential is not...
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    15% Revenue Share: U.S. Deal Resumes Nvidia/AMD China AI Chip Sales

    The U.S. government has brokered an unprecedented deal that lets Nvidia and AMD resume sales of specific AI accelerators to China — but only after the companies agree to hand over a 15% share of revenues from those Chinese sales to the U.S. government as a condition of newly issued export...
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