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Based on your replies, it doesn't seem like you want a discussion on the idea but that you want people to say how good of an idea this is.
Truth is, it's not. It's a half thought out idea that can't work. ASICs aren't that terribly unique that only a handful of chip manufacturers have the ability to make them. There are existing companies that can move on quickly because they already have the infrastructure and processes in place, but other chip manufacturers can enter the space.
This assumes there is no black marker or secondary marker for ASICs.
This assumes that one governments restrictions would be effective when there are companies in more than just the single country with these restrictions.
Restricting hardware also implies that hardware today (or ASICs of tomorrow) are going to stay as the tech for AI. It also hampers the R&D of this type of hardware.
It creates a barrier of entry to startups and smaller business that may use generative AI in positive ways.
It implies that the use of generative AI is inherently dangerous and needs to be regulated.
It assumes that consumer hardware wouldn't be able to match ASICs. ASICs are certainly fast, but enough consumer GPUs would match the processing power of a single ASIC.
It assumes the government is good, truthful, effective, honest, and moral.
It assumes that truth is a black and white construct.
It assumes that there will be a process to check, identify, communicate, and regulate AI generated information.