Nvidia is usually the company other firms have to respond to. Not the other way around. But on Tuesday, the $4 trillion chipmaker did something rare: it took to X to publicly defend itself after a report suggested that one of its biggest customers, Meta , is considering shifting part of its AI infrastructure to Google’s in-house chips, called TPUs.
The defensive move came after Nvidia stock fell over 2.5% on the news, and near the close, while shares of Alphabet — buoyed by its well-reviewed new Gemini 3 model, which was acclaimed by well-known techies such as Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff — climbed for a third day in a row.
The catalyst was a report from The Information claiming that Google has been pitching its AI chips, known as TPUs, to outside companies including Meta and

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