As a rule of thumb and for the uninitiated, the smaller the nanometre number of the die lithography of the semiconductor chip, the more advanced the process it is. In this case, Washington clearly doesn’t want China and its homegrown factories to be capable of manufacturing anything more advanced than their own companies. [Photo: TobiasD/Pixabay]For the record, this isn’t the first time the US has brought the banhammer down on SMIC. In fact, a ban was already put in place back in 2020, after Washington was said to have received news that the Chinese semiconductor maker had links to the country’s military, and that the company’s technology could possibly be used for said military purposes. On another note, the latest rounds of restrictions also come just as SMIC had a breakthrough in its own development of 7nm chips. It’s both an impressive and important feat for the manufacturer and one that was reportedly only possible after it allegedly poached engineering talent from Taiwan. Adding on to that, it also seems that SMIC’s success was achieved by supposedly copying TSMC’s first generation 7nm process node. Washington’s latest ban on semiconductor manufacturing equipment may not just affect SMIC alone; as it stands, non-Chinese brands such as Samsung, SK Hynix, UMC, and of course, TSMC, all have foundries and manufacturing plants based in China, and as it stands, that ban affects all factories currently within China. For another matter, the restrictions also come just as the US Senate recently passed a US$52 billion (~RM231 billion) bill, aimed at helping US-based chipmakers such as Intel and Micron. Unsurprisingly, Samsung and TSMC also want in on that pie, but given that they both are operating in China, gaining access to said funds may prove a tad more challenging. (Source: Bloomberg, Techspot)