| ▲ | Matl 7 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
There's solutions to everything you mention and as I said, usually when sanctions are applied to countries, companies and individuals are meant to deal exactly with this. This could range from quanta mandates on the supply side (the RAM manufacturers themselves in this case) to imposing secondary sanctions on 'other companies [that] would step in to provide data center services for a fee' If the US and the EU did this, these other companies would be mega careful about to whom and how they provide services to, the same way Chinese private companies today are generally super careful about not violating US sanctions. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | Aurornis 6 hours ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
> If the US and the EU did this, these other companies would be mega careful about to whom and how they provide services to, There is currently more demand than supply in the entire world. If the US and EU got together and told DRAM companies that we're going to sanction them if they don't give us cheap RAM, 10 other countries would roll out the red carpet to come bring that DRAM into their countries instead. The data centers would be built there. Then the US and EU would be compute-starved and have no choice but to go to these other countries for compute. I suggest you read up on the history of attempts to control prices of oil throughout history. Oil is an order of magnitude bigger market than DRAM. If you think it's realistic to suggest that the EU and US could sanction entire countries into keeping some chip prices down so people can save a couple hundred dollars on their next laptop, this isn't a conversation grounded in reality. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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