The company powering the AI boom is now in regulators’ sights. The European Commission has launched a full antitrust investigation into Nvidia, scrutinizing its CUDA software platform and its commanding grip on the market for AI chips. As Nvidia’s hardware and software underpin the vast majority of AI computing, the probe takes aim at one of the most strategically important — and dominant — companies in technology.
The investigation
The focus is the full stack. Regulators are examining alleged anti-competitive practices around CUDA, Nvidia’s proprietary software platform, and its dominance in GPUs. The concern is that Nvidia’s control over critical AI infrastructure — both the chips and the software developers depend on — could stifle competitors and entrench its position at the heart of the AI economy.
The CUDA chokehold
Software is the real moat. CUDA, Nvidia’s programming platform, has become the de facto standard for AI development, locking developers into its ecosystem and making rival hardware harder to adopt. Regulators worry this software lock-in cements Nvidia’s dominance beyond what chip performance alone would command — a classic competition concern in a critical market.
Why Nvidia is a target
Its power is immense. Nvidia’s chips are the engine of the AI revolution, in fierce demand and short supply, giving the company extraordinary leverage over customers, including the largest tech firms. When a single company controls such a critical bottleneck, regulators inevitably scrutinize whether that dominance is being maintained fairly or abused.
Why it matters
The case could reshape AI’s foundations. If regulators force changes to how CUDA or Nvidia’s GPU business operates, it could open the door to competitors and alter the economics of AI development. The probe also signals that antitrust enforcers are willing to target the infrastructure layer of AI, not just consumer-facing platforms.
The broader crackdown
Nvidia joins a crowded docket. The EU has been aggressive across tech — fining Apple and Meta under the DMA, advancing the AI Act, and scrutinizing Big Tech’s AI moves. Adding Nvidia to the list underscores that no part of the AI value chain, from chips to apps, is beyond regulatory reach in Europe’s tightening environment.
The bottom line
The EU’s antitrust investigation into Nvidia targets the CUDA chokehold and the company’s dominance over AI chips, striking at the foundations of the AI economy. Whatever the outcome, it signals that regulators intend to police even the infrastructure that powers AI. For Nvidia, the probe is a reminder that with unprecedented dominance comes unprecedented scrutiny — and the contest over AI’s commanding heights now includes the courtroom.