Thailand's SiamAI Denies Exporting US AI Servers to China
By Reuters | 09 May, 2026
Bangkok-based SiamAI has denied US accusations it had exported $2.5 billion worth of US AI technology to China, including more than $500 million shipped between April and mid-May 2025.
Bangkok-based SiamAI said on Saturday it had not exported AI servers to China and that it complies with U.S. export and re-export control laws.
Here are some details of the company's statement:
• The firm has faced allegations of circumventing exports of advanced chips from U.S. firms Super Micro Computer and Nvidia to China.
• "SiamAI has not engaged in the export of AI servers to China," it said in a statement.
• "SiamAI is committed to full adherence to all applicable U.S. export and re-export control laws and regulations," it said.
• U.S. prosecutors alleged at least $2.5 billion in U.S. AI technology was shipped to China, including more than $500 million shipped between April and mid-May 2025.
• In recent years, Thailand has attracted billions of dollars of investments for data centres from ByteDance's TikTok, Microsoft and Alphabet Inc's Google.
(Reporting by Chayut Setboonsarng; Editing by Tom Hogue)
Recent Articles
- Musk's Starbase Shakes Up Life on its Periphery
- Vox Momenti: Mars Man Rap
- GoldSea Votes: An Asian Governor in Maine...and Oklahoma?
- 'I Love the Inflation,' Trump Says of Prices Rising Amid Iran War
- China's JUNO Neutrino Detector Advances Precision in Mass-Ordering Quest
- Only 11% of Europeans View US as Ally, Survey Shows
- BYD Will Be World's Biggest Automaker in 5 Years Says Its Chairman
- US Consumer Prices Increase at Fastest Pace in 3 Years
- Traders Keep Bets on Fed Rate Hike by October
- Drone Risks Keep World Cup Security Planners Frantic
