This press release announces NVIDIA's $40 billion acquisition of Arm Limited, framing the combination as advancing AI computing for global benefit. The content engages with human rights tangentially—including concrete worker equity benefits, commitments to educational infrastructure in Cambridge, and aspirational statements about addressing healthcare, climate, and education challenges—but does not position human rights as central to the transaction. The primary narrative focuses on technological leadership and business synergy. Structural privacy concerns from domain-level tracking apply via inherited DCP modifiers.
> Huang told me that first thing that the combined company will do is to, “bring NVIDIA technology through Arm’s vast network.” So I’d expect NVIDIA GPU and NPU IP to become available quickly to smartphone, tablet, TV and automobile SoC providers as quickly as possible.
> Arm CEO Simon Segars framed it well when he told me, “We're moving into a world where software doesn't just run in one place. Your application today might run in the cloud, it might run on your phone, and there might be some embedded application running on a device, but I think increasingly and with the rollout of 5g and with some of the technologies that Jensen was just talking about this kind of application will become spread across all of those places. Delivering that and managing that there's a huge task to do."
> Huang ... “We're about to enter a phase, where we're going to create an internet that is thousands of times bigger than the internet that we enjoy today. A lot of people don't realize this. And so, so we would like to create a computing company for this age of AI.”
I love this, I was amongst early engineers on CUDA (compilers).
NVIDIA was so well run, but boxed into a smaller graphics card market - ATI and it were forced into low margins since they were made replaceable by OpenGL and DirectX standards. For the standard fans - they resulted a wealth transfer from NVIDIA to Apple etc. and reduced capital available for R&D.
NVIDIA was constantly attacked by a much bigger Intel (which changed interfaces to kill products and was made to pay by a court)
Through innovation, developing new technologies (CUDA) they increased market cap, and have used that to buy Arm/Mellanox.
I love the story of the underdog run by a founder, innovating it’s way to getting into new markets against harsh competition. Win for capitalism!
I wonder what this means for NVIDIA's recent RISC-V efforts [1]. Apparently they've been aiming to ship (or already have been shipping?) RISC-V microcontrollers on their GPUs for some time .
I’m not convinced this is a death sentence for ARM. I doubt nVidia spent $40b on a company with the intention of killing it’s golden goose business model. The contractual agreements might change, but ARM wasn’t exactly giving their IP away for free before this move.
I see this going a few ways for different players:
The perpetual architecture license folks that make their own cores like Apple, Samsung, Qualcomm, and Fujitsu (I think they needed this for the A64FX, right?) will be fine, and may just fork off on the ARMv8.3 spec, adding a few instructions here or there. Apple especially will be fine as they can get code into LLVM for whatever "Apple Silicon" evolves into over time.
The smaller vendors that license core designs (like the A5x and A7x series, etc.) like Allwinner, Rockchip, and Broadcom are probably in a worse state - nVidia could cut them off from any new designs. I'd be scrambling for an alternative if I were any of these companies.
Long term, it really depends on how nVidia acts - they could release low end cores with no license fees to try to fend off RISC-V, but that hasn't been overly successful when tried earlier with the SPARC and Power architectures. Best case scenario, they keep all the perpetual architecture people happy and architecturally coherent, and release some interesting datacenter chips, leaving the low end (and low margin) to 3rd parties.
Hopefully they'll also try to mend fences with the open source community, or at least avoid repeating past offenses.
Tangential, but when I hear about all these insane "start-up du jour" valuations, does anyone else feel like $40B isn't a lot of a hardware company sur as ARM?
Most tech acquisitions are fairly bland - they often maintain their separate ways for several years with a bit of integration. Others satisfy a political purpose or serve to stifle competition.
However, given the momentum of Nvidia these past several years alongside the massive adoption and evolution of ARM, this is probably going to be the most interesting acquisition to watch over the next few years.
Many various reasons for this but one perspective I am curious about is how much this is actually a defensive move against Intel, because nVidia knows Intel is busy developing dedicated graphics via Xe, and if nVidia just allows that to continue they are going to find themselves simultaneously competing with and dependent on a vendor that owns the whole stack that their platform depends on. It is not a place I would want to be, even accounting for how incompetent Intel seems to have been for the last 10 years.
No one has seemed to notice the following two things:
"To pave the way for the deal, SoftBank reversed an earlier decision to strip out an internet-of-things business from Arm and transfer it to a new company under its control. That would have stripped Arm of what was meant to be the high-growth engine that would power it into a 5G-connected future. One person said that SoftBank made the decision because it would have put it in conflict with commitments made to the U.K. over Arm, which were agreed at the time of the 2016 deal to appease the government." (from https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2020/09/nvidia-reportedly-to... )
and
"The transaction does not include Arm’s IoT Services Group." (nvidia news.)
which appear to contradict each other.
I'm not sure about the significance of this. I would have guessed Nvidia would have wanted the IoT group to remain.
Also, to first order, when a company issues stock to purchase another corporation, that cost is essentially "free" since the value of the corporation increases.
In other words, Nvidia is essentially paying $12 billion in cash for ARM up front, and that's all. (The extra $5B in cash or stock depends on financial performance of ARM, and thus is a second-order effect.)
Just noting that Apple doesn't have a perpetual license, they have an architecture license[1], including for 64bit parts[2].
This allows them to design their own cores using the Arm instruction set[3] and presumably includes perpetual IP licenses for Arm IP used while the license is in effect. New Arm IP doesn't seem to be included, since existing 32bit Arm licensees had to upgrade to a 64bit license[2].
Qualcomm and Apple are going to be fine even with NVIDIA owning ARM. They are American companies under the protection of US legislation and representation.
However the situation for Chinese companies is even clearer now. Huawei, Hikvision etc. need to move away from ARM. Probably on to their own thing as RISC-V is dominated by US companies.
A 25% gain over a horizon of four years is not bad for your average investment -- but this isn't an average investment.
First, compared to the SP500, this underperforms over the same horizon (even compared to end of 2019 rather than the inflated prices right now).
Second, ARM's sector (semiconductors) has performed far, far better in that time. The PHOX (Philadelphia Semiconductor Index) doubled in the same time period.
And looking at AMD and NVIDIA, it feels as if ARM would have been in a position to benefit from the surrounding euphoria.
On the other hand, unless I'm misremembering, ARM back then was already considered massively overvalued precisely because it was such a prime takeover target, so perhaps its the $32B that are throwing me off here.
This is terrible. Not really just because of Nvidia - which has a lot of problems I've previously commented on the rumors of this [1] - but Nvidia's ownership completely changes ARM's incentives.
ARM created a business model for itself where they had to act as a "BDFL" for the ARM architecture and IP. They made an architecture, CPU designs, and GPU designs for others. They had no stake in the chip making game, and they had others - Samsung, Apple, Nvidia, Qualcomm, Huawei, Mediatek, Rockchip and loads of others make the chip. Their business model was to make the ARM ecosystem accessible for as many companies as possible, so they could sell as many licenses as possible. In that way, ARM's business model enabled a very diverse and thriving ARM market. I think this is the sole reason we see ARM eating the chip world today.
This business model would continue to work perfectly fine as a privately held company, or being owned by a faceless investor company that wants you to make as much money as possible. But it's not fine if you are owned by a company that wants to use you to control their own position in the chip market. There is no way Nvidia (any other chip company, but as laid out previously Nvidia might even be more concerning) will spend 40 billion on this without them deliberately or inadvertently destroying ARM's open CPU and GPU ecosystem. Will Nvidia allow selling ARM licenses to competitors of Nvidia's business? Will Nvidia reserve ARM's best IP as a selling point for its own chips? Will Nvidia allow Mali to continue existing? Any innovations ARM made previously it sold to anyone mostly indiscriminatorily (outside of legal restrictions), but now every time the question must be asked "does Nvidia have a better propietary purpose for this?". For any ARM chip maker the situation will be that Nvidia is both your ruthless competitor, but it also sells you the IP you need to build your chips.
EDIT: ARM's interests up to last week were to create and empower as many competitors for Nvidia as possible. They were good at that and was the root of the success of the ARM ecosystem. That incentive is completely gone now.
Unless Nvidia leaves ARM alone (and why would they spend $40B on that??), this has got to be the beginning of the end of ARM's golden age.
My initial reaction is that this reminiscent of the AMD-ATI deal back in 2006. It almost killed both companies and comparatively, this deal size is much bigger ($40B vs. $6B) for both a more mature industry and companies involved.
$40B is an obscene lot of money objectively and what's the endgame for Nvidia? If it's to "fuse" ARM's top CPU designs with their GPU prowess, then couldn't they invest the money to restart their own CPU designs (e.g. Carmel)? My inner pessimist, as with others here, is that Nvidia will somehow cripple the ARM ecosystem or prioritize their own needs over those of other customers'. Perhaps an appropriate analogy is Qualcomm's IP licensing shenanigans and how they've crippled the non-iOS smartphone industry.
That said, there's also examples of companies making these purchases with minimal insidious behavior and co-existing with their would-be competitors: Microsoft's acquisition of Github, Google's Pixel smartphones, Sony's camera lenses business and even Samsung, which supposedly firewalls its components teams so the best tech is available to whoever wants (and is willing to pay for it).
I suppose if this acquisition ends up going through (big if), then we'll see Nvidia's true intent in 3-5 years.
When will Europe realise that there is no second place when it comes to a market - the larger player will always eventually end up owning everything.
I can not put into words how furious I am at the UK's Conservative party for not protecting our last great tech company.
Europe has been fooled into the USA's ultra free market system (which works brilliantly for the US but is terrible for everybody else). As such American tech companies have brought EVERYTHING and eventually moth balled them.
Take Renderware it was the leading game engine of the PS2 era consoles, brought by EA and mothballed. Nokia is another great example brought by Microsoft and mothballed.
Imagination Technologies was slightly different in that it wasn't bought but Apple essentially mothballed them. Now ARM will undoubtedly be the next via an intermediate buyout.
You look across Europe and there is nothing. Deepmind could have been a great European tech company - it just needed the right investment.
None of the top comments disuss the possibility of the deal not going through due to antitrust or other concerns by regulators. While it's owned by a Japanese company and being sold to an American one, China most likely doesn't approve and it could be a diplomatic issue due to security and intelligence concerns?
Not sure how relistic that scenario is, although I personally can very much see this being used as a negotiation vehicle, depending on the actual security concern (I'm obviously not an expert there..)
RISC-V still seems too ad-hoc to me, and really new. Hard to say where it'd go for now.
I know momentum is currently towards ARM over POWER, but... OpenPOWER is certainly a thing, and has IBM / Red Hat support. IBM may be expensive, but they already were proven "fair partners" in the OpenPOWER initiative and largely supportive of OSS / Free Software.
The comment identified the positive side of the nvidia story. Note that nvidia had not had large acquisition for many years.
This acquisition can be seen as a beacon of nvidia's past struggle against the market and the competitors.
For whatever happened, nvidia innovated to their success, and had enabled possibly the biggest tech boom so far through deep learning. Might be one day everyone claimed nvidia to be the "most important company" on earth.
My instincts are telling me this is smoke and mirrors to rationalize a $40E9 deal. The only part of that that computes at all is the GPU integration, and that only works if NVIDIA doesn't terrorize Arm licencees. The rest is buzzwords.
> The perpetual architecture license folks that make their own cores like Apple, Samsung, Qualcomm, and Fujitsu (I think they needed this for the A64FX, right?) will be fine
There is one thing they would need to worry about though, which is that if the rest of the market moves to RISC-V or x64 or whatever else, it's not implausible that someone might at some point make a processor which is superior to the ones those companies make in-house. If it's the same architecture, you just buy them or license the design and put them in your devices. If it's not, you're stuck between suffering an architecture transition that your competitors have already put behind them or sticking with your uncompetitive in-house designs using the old architecture that nobody else wants anymore.
Their best move might be to forget about the architecture license and make the switch to something else with the rest of the market.
Samsung, Qualcomm, and MediaTek all currently just use off the shelf A5x & A7x cores in their SoCs. Unless that part of the company is losing money I don't expect nVidia to cut that off. Especially since that's likely a key part of why nVidia acquired ARM in the first place - I can't imagine they care about the Mali team(s) or IP.
> One person close to the talks said that Nvidia would make commitments to the UK government over Arm’s future in Britain, where opposition politicians have recently insisted that any potential deal must safeguard British jobs.
So the deal has already been influenced by one regulator. That should encourage other regulators.
> SoftBank will remain committed to Arm’s long-term success through its ownership stake in NVIDIA, expected to be under 10 percent.
>Also, to first order, when a company issues stock to purchase another corporation, that cost is essentially "free" since the value of the corporation increases.
This isn't correct. If investors thing Nvidia overpaid, its share price will decline. There are many examples of acquiring companies losing significant value on announcements to buy other companies even in pure stock deals.
Intel has been promising high-end graphics for decades, and delivering low end integrated graphics as a feature for their CPUs. Which makes sense, the market for CPUs is worth more than the market for game oriented GPUs. The rise of GPUs used in AI might change this calculation, but I doubt it. I suspect that nVidia just would like to move into the CPU market.
I'm so exercised about this that I'm setting up a think tank to actively discuss UK control of critical tech (and "golden geese" as per others in this thread). If you're in tech and have a problem with this, please drop me a line, I'm @bencollier on Twitter.
It is not "free", it means current shareholders of Nvidia are paying for the remaining money. Their stock is diluted on fresh issue of shares.[1]
The $12B comes from Nvidia the company, the remaining money comes from Nvidia's shareholders directly.
[1] Only if the valuation of ARM is "worth it" the fresh issue of shares will not cost the current shareholders anything. This is rarely the case , if Nvida overvalued(or less likely undervalued) the deal then current shareholders are giving more than they got for it.
Qualcomm, Apple and NVidia will lose favor with the US government unless they bring (at least a full copy of) their FAB partners and the rest of their supply chains home to America (Southwest including USMCA zone). We love Southeast Asia, but the pandemic highlighted our vulnerability and, as a country, we’re not going to keep sourcing our critical infrastructure in China —or it’s back yard. If those American CEOs keep balking at the huge investment required, you will see the US government write massive checks to Intel (has numerous, albeit obsolete, domestic FABs), DELL and upstarts (like System76 in Colorado) to pick winners, while the elevator to hell gains a new stop in Silicon Valley and San Diego (nationalizing patents, etc) during a sort of “war effort” like we had in the early 1940s.
"and may just fork off on the ARMv8.3 spec, adding a few instructions here or there"
No, they may not. People keep suggesting these kinds of things, but part of the license agreement is that you can't modify the ISA. Only ARM can do that.
> I never liked Softbank owning it, but hey someone has to.
I understand what you're saying and this seems to be the prevailing pattern but I really don't understand it. ARM could easily be a standalone company. For some reason, mergers are in.
To play devil’s advocate a bit, are nVidia's incentives necessarily so different? Their goal will be to make as much money as possible, and it's clear that licensing has been a winning strategy for ARM.
Samsung comes to mind as another company that makes their own TVs, phones, SSDs, ect., but is also perfectly happy to license the underlying screens and chips in those products to other companies. From my vantage point, the setup seems to be working well?
Concrete commitments to worker benefits and job security. Press release states '$1.5 billion in equity to be issued to Arm employees' and commitment to retain workforce. These are explicit provisions for worker economic participation and employment stability.
FW Ratio: 60%
Observable Facts
Press release states 'NVIDIA will also issue $1.5 billion in equity to Arm employees.'
Document commits to 'retain the name and strong brand identity of Arm' and implies retention of Arm employment base.
Announcement includes commitment to 'expand on this great site' in Cambridge, suggesting job preservation and growth.
Inferences
Equity issuance to all Arm employees demonstrates commitment to worker economic participation and profit-sharing in the combined entity.
Explicit employment-related commitments suggest the acquisition is framed with worker interests in consideration, advancing Article 23 protections.
Concrete commitments to educational infrastructure and knowledge development. Press release commits to 'training facilities for developers,' 'startup incubator,' 'world-class AI research facility,' and attracting 'researchers and scientists from the U.K. and around the world.'
FW Ratio: 60%
Observable Facts
Press release commits to establishing 'training facilities for developers and a startup incubator' at Cambridge campus.
Document pledges to build 'world-class AI research facility' supporting developments in healthcare, life sciences, robotics.
Announcement includes commitment to 'attract researchers and scientists from the U.K. and around the world to conduct groundbreaking work.'
Inferences
Explicit investment in training and research facilities directly supports the right to education and knowledge development.
Creating a startup incubator and research center facilitates access to education and professional development for developers and researchers globally.
Explicit commitment to intellectual property protection: 'Arm's intellectual property will remain registered in the U.K.' This affirms property rights security in the context of the acquisition.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
Press release states explicitly: 'Arm's intellectual property will remain registered in the U.K.'
Document commits to 'retain the name and strong brand identity of Arm' post-acquisition.
Inferences
The explicit commitment to maintain IP registration in UK suggests respect for property rights and national jurisdiction over intellectual assets.
Emphasis on retaining Arm's brand identity implies recognition of IP value and corporate identity as proprietary assets deserving protection.
Explicit vision statement connecting technology to public health and welfare improvement. CEO quote: 'Arm and NVIDIA share a vision and passion that ubiquitous, energy-efficient computing will help address the world's most pressing issues from climate change to healthcare, from agriculture to education.' Also mentions applications in healthcare, robotics, self-driving cars beneficial to quality of life.
FW Ratio: 60%
Observable Facts
Press release includes explicit vision statement: 'ubiquitous, energy-efficient computing will help address the world's most pressing issues from climate change to healthcare, from agriculture to education.'
Document lists healthcare, robotics, and self-driving cars as application areas for AI technology.
CEO Simon Segars is quoted on shared vision to address global issues.
Inferences
The framing of technology as solution to healthcare, climate, and education challenges suggests orientation toward improving global standards of living.
Commitment to establishing research facilities in fields like healthcare and life sciences indicates aspiration to contribute to public health advancement.
Explicit commitment to community and societal benefit. Both the Arm CEO and the broader framing emphasize shared vision to address 'world's most pressing issues from climate change to healthcare, from agriculture to education.'
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
CEO Simon Segars quoted: 'Arm and NVIDIA share a vision and passion that ubiquitous, energy-efficient computing will help address the world's most pressing issues from climate change to healthcare, from agriculture to education.'
Press release frames the combination as having 'tremendous benefits for both companies, our customers, and the industry.'
Inferences
The explicit framing of technology development as serving community benefit and addressing global challenges reflects commitment to societal duties under Article 29.
Multiple references to benefits to 'the industry,' customers, and global ecosystem suggest broadened stakeholder consideration beyond shareholder returns.
Framing of global technology expansion and inclusive ecosystem. Text states the combination 'advance computing from the cloud, smartphones, PCs, self-driving cars and robotics, to edge IoT, and expand AI computing to every corner of the globe.'
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
Press release commits to 'expand AI computing to every corner of the globe' and serve 'nearly every technology market in the world.'
Inferences
The framing of global technology expansion suggests aspiration toward universal access to computing innovation across geographies and economic regions.
Content does not engage with UDHR preamble concepts of human dignity, rights, or freedom from fear and want. Focuses on technological innovation and business strategy.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
Press release announces $40 billion acquisition and frames it as creating 'premier computing company for the age of artificial intelligence'.
Inferences
Absence of any reference to human rights framework or universal dignity suggests the announcement prioritizes business outcomes over human rights positioning.
Document includes extensive forward-looking statement disclaimers and risk acknowledgments, suggesting awareness of need to avoid misrepresentation and maintain factual boundaries. No explicit statement that the acquisition violates or undermines UDHR, but also no explicit safeguards against misuse of technology for human rights violations.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
Press release includes extensive forward-looking statement disclaimer: 'All statements included or incorporated by reference in this communication, other than statements or characterizations of historical fact, are forward-looking statements.'
Document explicitly notes transaction is 'subject to customary closing conditions, including the receipt of regulatory approvals for the U.K., China, the European Union and the United States.'
Inferences
The inclusion of forward-looking disclaimers and regulatory safeguards suggests awareness of limits to claims and need for legal compliance.
Absence of any mention of human rights due diligence, labor rights protections, or safeguards against weaponization of AI suggests limited human rights governance framework for the acquisition.
Press release content does not discuss privacy or personal data protection.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
Press release page contains no privacy policy, cookie consent banner, or data protection language.
Inferences
Absence of on-page privacy controls suggests the press release itself is not privacy-protective in structure, though domain-level tracking concerns are documented in the DCP.
Page implements Google Analytics with extensive tracking (client ID, session tracking, user properties). Consent mechanism present (OneTrust) but defaults analytics_storage and ad_storage to 'denied'. Presence of ad_storage tracking flag suggests ad targeting capability.
Terms of Service
—
ToS not directly observable from page content.
Identity & Mission
Mission
+0.10
Article 25
Tagline 'Artificial Intelligence Computing Leadership from NVIDIA' suggests innovation and technological advancement but no explicit human rights commitments evident.
Editorial Code
—
No editorial code of conduct observable from page.
Ownership
—
NVIDIA corporate ownership clear but no relevant modifier warranted.
Access & Distribution
Access Model
+0.05
Article 19
Press release freely accessible. No paywall or subscription evident. Supports information access rights.
Ad/Tracking
-0.10
Article 12
Tracking infrastructure (gtag, Google Analytics) implemented with ad_storage flag and link-click tracking suggest targeted advertising capability.
Accessibility
—
Limited accessibility signals in provided HTML. Navigation structure visible but no ARIA labels or alt text observable.
No paywall, subscription, or registration required to access press release. Freely available to all readers. Domain access_model DCP modifier (+0.05) reflects general free access policy.
Legal and compliance language present (SEC filing references, regulatory approval requirements), suggesting adherence to legal frameworks. No specific human rights due diligence or safeguards mentioned.
No concrete welfare programs or health initiatives are described as implemented; these are aspirational future commitments. Domain mission DCP modifier (+0.1) provides additional context on organizational values.
Repeated use of superlatives: 'world's premier computing company,' 'extraordinary company,' 'fabulously positioned for the age of AI,' 'world-class technology center'
appeal to authority
Multiple named executives (Jensen Huang, Masayoshi Son, Simon Segars) quoted throughout, establishing credibility through authority figures
How accessible is this content to a general audience?
moderatemedium jargongeneral
Longitudinal
· 5 evals
Audit Trail
25 entries
2026-02-28 10:17
eval
Evaluated by claude-haiku-4-5-20251001: +0.11 (Mild positive)
2026-02-28 01:34
dlq_replay
DLQ message 97543 replayed to EVAL_QUEUE: Nvidia to Acquire Arm for $40B
--
2026-02-28 01:34
dlq_replay
DLQ message 97547 replayed to EVAL_QUEUE: Nvidia to Acquire Arm for $40B
--
2026-02-28 00:29
eval_success
Light evaluated: Neutral (0.00)
--
2026-02-28 00:29
eval
Evaluated by llama-3.3-70b-wai: 0.00 (Neutral)
2026-02-27 21:05
dlq_auto_replay
DLQ auto-replay: message 97551 re-enqueued
--
2026-02-27 16:33
eval_success
Light evaluated: Neutral (0.00)
--
2026-02-27 16:33
eval
Evaluated by llama-4-scout-wai: 0.00 (Neutral)
2026-02-27 01:45
dlq
Dead-lettered after 1 attempts: Nvidia to Acquire Arm for $40B
--
2026-02-27 01:43
rate_limit
OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b
--
2026-02-27 01:42
rate_limit
OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b
--
2026-02-27 01:42
eval_success
Evaluated: Neutral (0.00)
--
2026-02-27 01:42
eval
Evaluated by deepseek-v3.2: +0.00 (Neutral) 10,959 tokens
2026-02-27 01:42
rater_validation_warn
Validation warnings for model deepseek-v3.2: 23W 23R
--
2026-02-27 01:41
rate_limit
OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b
--
2026-02-27 01:39
dlq
Dead-lettered after 1 attempts: Nvidia to Acquire Arm for $40B
--
2026-02-27 01:37
rate_limit
OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b
--
2026-02-27 01:37
eval_retry
OpenRouter error 400 model=llama-3.3-70b
--
2026-02-27 01:37
eval_failure
Evaluation failed: Error: OpenRouter API error 400: {"error":{"message":"Provider returned error","code":400,"metadata":{"raw":"{\"details\":{\"_errors\":[\"response_format is not supported by this model\"]},\"issues\":
--
2026-02-27 01:36
rate_limit
OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b
--
2026-02-27 01:34
dlq
Dead-lettered after 1 attempts: Nvidia to Acquire Arm for $40B
--
2026-02-27 01:33
eval_failure
Evaluation failed: Error: OpenRouter API error 400: {"error":{"message":"Provider returned error","code":400,"metadata":{"raw":"{\"details\":{\"_errors\":[\"response_format is not supported by this model\"]},\"issues\":
build 1ad9551+j7zs · deployed 2026-03-02 09:09 UTC · evaluated 2026-03-02 10:41:39 UTC
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