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Degradation: NVidia effictively bans cheap render farms
  • Nvidia updated its GeForce and Titan software licensing in the past few days, adding a new clause that reads: “No Datacenter Deployment. The SOFTWARE is not licensed for datacenter deployment, except that blockchain processing in a datacenter is permitted.”

    Their words:

    GeForce and TITAN GPUs were never designed for data center deployments with the complex hardware, software, and thermal requirements for 24x7 operation, where there are often multi-stack racks. To clarify this, we recently added a provision to our GeForce-specific EULA to discourage potential misuse of our GeForce and TITAN products in demanding, large-scale enterprise environments.

    NVIDIA addresses these unique mechanical, physical, management, functional, reliability, and availability needs of servers with our Tesla products, which include a three-year warranty covering data center workloads, NVIDIA enterprise support, guaranteed continuity of supply and extended SKU life expectancy for data center components. This has been communicated to the market since the Tesla products were first released.

    Capitalism in its best.

    Company banning lot of cheaper and better cards using EULA agreement for drivers (sic!).

    But they offer you to use same cards for... blockchain (aka energy burning for crypto scam).

    And prostitute media like pink bunnies eating it for lunch without much complain.

  • 2 Replies sorted by
  • Aren't these EULA agreements illegal in the EU. As far as I know, at least here in Germany, if you buy a product you can do with it what you want - no one can stop you from putting these cheaper cards in multirack configurations.

  • @Psyco

    It is fully legal.

    They do not prevent you to use GPU as you wish. It is protected by law.

    They just prevent you to use software (drivers) for this.