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In traditional international trade, borders are physical lines and customs. But the U.S. House of Representatives officially passed the "Remote Access Security Act" ( RASA ) on January 12th, which changes the game— the boundaries of global technology are being redrawn.
This is not just a legal amendment. It signifies a complete shift in the concept of "export controls": from managing physical goods to regulating digital behaviors. In plain terms, we are witnessing the transformation of "technological sovereignty" from virtual to tangible.
**Cloud vulnerabilities are being sealed off**
The key to RASA lies in its redefinition of what constitutes an "export." Over the years, the U.S. has restricted AI chip exports, but foreign entities found ways around it—they directly rent GPU computing power from American service providers and access it remotely via the cloud. Legally, this was once a gray area, classified as "service consumption" rather than "hardware transfer."
With RASA passing, this loophole is now completely closed. From now on, any hostile entity that remotely rents or accesses high-performance computing resources from the U.S. over the internet will be illegal. In other words, the reach of export controls has extended from chips in containers to signals and computational requests crossing borders.
**Signals are now also considered export goods**
What does this shift mean? Technological sovereignty is no longer just a conceptual idea. When a line of code, an API call, or a cloud access can be subject to regulation, the entire logic of tech geopolitical strategy is rewritten. The U.S. is using legal means to turn the digital space into a territory with physical borders.