Jun

18

Chips Ahoy!


Posted by at 8:24 pm on June 18, 2009
Category: Iran Sanctions

AMD Opteron ChipMore U.S. computer chips have been sighted in Iran, this time some AMD Opteron Dual Core microprocessors that the Aerospace Research Institute of Iran (“ARI”) touts it has incorporated into what passes for a supercomputer in Iran. The ARI is affiliated with the Iranian government and conducts research on missile technology.

A spokesman for AMD states that he’s “shocked, shocked” to discover that there are AMD chips in Iran. Actually he said that the company complies with all export laws and he has no idea how the company’s chips wound up in Iran, a statement that is likely true in the sense that AMD does not know which of its distributors broke its distribution agreement and sold AMD product to Iran. But generally speaking, AMD, like everyone else, knows how the chips wound up in Iran. The unmentioned two-ton elephant sitting in the corner of the parlor is — are you ready? — named Dubai.

Back in December 2007, this blog reported that Amirkabir University of Technology in Tehran had announced that it had used 218 AMD microprocessors to build what it called a “supercomputer” with a theoretical peak performance of 860 gigaflops. (Real supercomputers measure peak performance in hundreds of teraflops, so this was frankly a rather anemic supercomputer.) AMD issued pretty much the same press release at the time, indicating that it complied with U.S. export laws and had no idea how its chips wound up in Iran.

A little bit of investigation by this blog and we found a picture of Amirkabir assembling the computer complete with pictures of boxes for the AMD chips bearing the logo of Thacker, a company based in — surprise, surprise! — Dubai. Thacker also did its best imitation of Captain Renault and purported to be shocked that its products had wound up just across the Strait of Hormuz in Iran.

This time AMD has indicated that it is going to inform the Bureau of Industry and Security (“BIS”) that it has learned that ARI’s website claimed that it had used AMD chips to build a computer. That is, of course, the right thing for the company to do, but I wonder what such a disclosure is called. It’s not what BIS would normally call a “Voluntary Self Disclosure.” Perhaps we should call it a “Voluntary Somebody Else Disclosure”?

[Hat tip to Patrick Thibodeau at Computer World for breaking this story.]

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Copyright © 2009 Clif Burns. All Rights Reserved.
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4 Comments:


Do you think that in this Voluntary Somebody Else Disclosure they have an OOPS B****R section under the heading of how the violation came to light?

Comment by CG on June 19th, 2009 @ 3:38 am

For any fellow yanks who might not understand the “Oops. B****R” reference, I won’t spell it out, this being a family-oriented blog and all. You might translate the phrase in American slang simply as “Oh (expletive deleted)”

And as a hint on how to fill in the missing letters in B****R, it’s a form of a slang word that might fill in for the missing word in this phrase — “Rum, (missing naughty word), and the lash” — which refers to the three things that used to propel the British Navy. The B-word here no longer directly refers to that practice, but is just a general, all-round expletive, much like the P-word in French no longer refers to someone who is a P-word but instead is just a substitute for the M-word. Or better yet, when you really want a naughty exclamation of annoyance in French, you can combine them into “P-word de M-word!!” — a wonderful expression if you’ve picked up a hot skillet and burned the living daylights out of your hand.

Comment by Clif Burns on June 19th, 2009 @ 6:30 am

I learn the BEST things from this blog. ๐Ÿ™‚

Comment by Eric on June 19th, 2009 @ 8:00 am

I was at the original Whole Foods in Austin very late at night one time & they were playing an old Johnny Cash song on the overhead speaker. An employee cut in and asked, “What’s B****R mean?” To which the manager replied, “Oh (expletive deleted) — there’s a customer in the store!”

Who could have ever guessed those two phrases used in combination would help me better understand the export law blog a decade later?

Enjoy your weekend everyone! And Clif, nice work picking up on that photo with Thacker’s name in it.

chris

Comment by Chris W. on June 19th, 2009 @ 12:12 pm