**Nvidia bans comparisons between GeForce RTX 5060 and RTX 4060**
TechSpot, together with the YouTube channel Hardware Unboxed, has explained why independent reviews of the GeForce RTX 5060 graphics card shouldn’t be expected right now.
It became known a few weeks ago that Nvidia decided not to provide drivers for RTX 5060 reviews. According to Hardware Unboxed, the company was only willing to supply drivers to “friendly” reviewers and media outlets who agreed to follow its strict guidelines and publish so-called *“preliminary”* reviews of the new GPU. The move was intended to avoid spoiling the launch of the most affordable gaming graphics card in the Blackwell series. However, as it turned out, that was only the tip of the iceberg.
According to Hardware Unboxed, one of Nvidia’s key requirements for these “preliminary” reviews was not to compare the RTX 5060 with the RTX 4060. Instead, the new card could only be compared against the older RTX 3060 and RTX 2060 models. Moreover, Nvidia insisted that all RTX 5060 benchmarks be conducted with the multi-frame generation feature enabled in x4 mode — a setting that significantly inflates the reported frame rates, most of which are artificially generated. Under such conditions, older RTX cards that lack this feature appear far weaker in performance charts, often trailing the newcomer by a factor of three or four.
These “preliminary” RTX 5060 reviews also come with other restrictions. For example, most game benchmarks are limited to 1080p resolution, following a strict list of selected titles and mandatory use of DLSS (along with the aforementioned multi-frame generator).
TechSpot notes that the absence of genuine independent reviews — contrasted with these restricted “previews” — is especially alarming.
This is not the first time Nvidia has attempted to manipulate the media and potential buyers. Many still remember the “meme-worthy” marketing of the GeForce RTX 3090 as an “8K gaming card” and the rigid guidelines surrounding 4K testing for the RTX 3080. Nvidia has long been willing to leverage its influence to selectively highlight the strengths of its products while concealing less flattering realities.
As TechSpot writes, with the RTX 5060 coverage, Nvidia has “hit a new low.” This marks the first time the company has actively excluded nearly all independent reviewers and voices from the launch of what could have been its most widely adopted GPU. Such a move sets a troubling precedent — granting access only to media outlets that toe the corporate line, thereby marginalizing independent, critical coverage in favor of promotional fluff. This could also distort search algorithms and public perception, since during the launch window, online discussions are dominated by glowing previews rather than objective reviews that have yet to appear.
All this is happening at a time when Nvidia is more powerful than ever. It is now one of the world’s three largest companies, with a market capitalization of $3.3 trillion, and the majority of its revenue comes from selling AI accelerators for data centers.
Gaming has become a relatively minor part of Nvidia’s business. That’s why it’s hard to reconcile their aggressive media tactics with their broader corporate messaging. If their hardware truly speaks for itself, why resort to such heavy-handed strategies? At this scale, the risk of backlash or reputational harm — especially now that the Nvidia name is known far beyond the PC gaming community — may outweigh any short-term marketing benefits.
As for the RTX 5060 itself, TechSpot advises all potential buyers *not* to purchase the card based solely on the current “preliminary” reviews. It’s better to wait for full independent benchmarks that reveal not only its strengths — which appear limited — but also its flaws. For example, with just 8 GB of memory, the card is already outdated even as it hits store shelves.
TechSpot adds that about a month ago, when Nvidia launched the RTX 5060 Ti 16GB and RTX 5060 Ti 8GB and announced the RTX 5060, company representatives told journalists that the $200 RTX 5060 wasn’t targeted at enthusiasts who follow detailed reviews from channels like Hardware Unboxed — implying that comprehensive reviews weren’t important for this class of product at launch. Naturally, TechSpot disagreed. During the same conversation, Nvidia’s representatives added that “gamers love the 60 series.” So which is it? Do gamers love it, yet enthusiasts who care about reviews aren’t supposed to?
Perhaps that logic might apply to ultra-budget cards priced under $150, but certainly not to what has historically been the most popular class of GPUs in Nvidia’s entire lineup each generation.

#Nvidia #GeForceRTX5060 #RTX5060 #RTX4060 #TechSpot #HardwareUnboxed #GPUs #GraphicsCard #PCGaming #NvidiaBlackwell #DLSS #FrameGeneration #GamingNews #PCHardware #HardwareReview #TechNews #NvidiaControversy #RTX #Gamers #PCMasterRace #Benchmark #TechCommunity #IndependentReviews

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https://fedia.io/m/[email protected]d/t/2919206

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> [...] Late last year, we were ready for some meaningful gaming performance gains. But when Zen 5 arrived, we were left stumped. The 9700X was only about 1 – 2% faster than the 7700X, while the 9600X was just a few percent faster than the 7600X. Although performance margins varied between review outlets due to different...

DeepSeek R2 Demorado Tras Presiones de China a Nvidia y Huawei

El lanzamiento del esperado modelo de lenguaje grande DeepSeek R2 se ha pospuesto debido a las presiones del gobierno chino sobre Nvidia y Huawei para que prioricen el mercado local, afectando la disponibilidad de hardware crucial para el entrenamiento de la IA.

El lanzamiento del prometedor modelo de lenguaje grande (LLM) DeepSeek R2, desarrollado por la startup china del mismo nombre, ha sido inesperadamente demorado. Fuentes cercanas a la compañía han revelado que esta decisión se debe a las crecientes presiones ejercidas por el gobierno chino tanto sobre Nvidia como sobre Huawei (Fuente The Financial Times).

El objetivo de estas presiones es que ambas empresas prioricen el mercado interno chino en la distribución de sus unidades de procesamiento gráfico (GPU) de alto rendimiento, cruciales para el entrenamiento de modelos de inteligencia artificial como DeepSeek R2.

Esta situación ha generado una escasez de hardware avanzado necesario para completar el entrenamiento del modelo DeepSeek R2 en los plazos previstos. Nvidia, a pesar de las restricciones impuestas por Estados Unidos a la exportación de sus chips más avanzados a China, sigue siendo un proveedor clave de GPU para el mercado chino. Huawei, por su parte, está desarrollando sus propias soluciones de hardware para IA, pero aún no alcanza la capacidad y el rendimiento de las ofertas de Nvidia en algunos aspectos.

La directiva del gobierno chino busca fortalecer la autonomía tecnológica del país en el campo de la inteligencia artificial, asegurando que las empresas locales tengan acceso prioritario a los recursos computacionales necesarios. Sin embargo, esta medida ha tenido un impacto directo en los planes de lanzamiento de startups como DeepSeek, que ahora deben navegar por un panorama de disponibilidad de hardware incierto y plazos de entrega prolongados. La fecha oficial para el lanzamiento de DeepSeek R2 aún no ha sido anunciada, y se espera que la compañía realice una actualización una vez que se resuelvan los problemas de suministro de hardware.

#China #DeepSeekR2 #Hardware #Huawei #IA #InteligenciaArtificial #LLM #Nvidia #Retraso #TechSpot #arielmcorg #infosertec #PORTADA

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"China's ambitious drive toward semiconductor independence may have just reached a new milestone. A Shenzhen-based startup, Lisuan Technology, has officially powered on its first homegrown 6nm graphics card, the G100. While full specs are still under wraps, the company claims this chip aims to deliver performance on par with Nvidia's RTX 4060."

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NVIDIA's Dirty Manipulation of Reviews

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Check out TechSpot’s new article featuring LMG Security’s @sherridavidoff and @MDurrin on how “Evil AI” is accelerating cyber threats.

The article recaps their #RSAC2025 presentation, where they demonstrated how rogue AI tools like WormGPT—AI stripped of ethical guardrails—can rapidly detect and help exploit real-world vulnerabilities.

From identifying SQL flaws to delivering working Log4j and Magento exploits, Sherri and Matt reveal how AI is arming cybercriminals faster than traditional defenses can keep up.

Read the full TechSpot article: https://www.techspot.com/news/107786-rsa-conference-experts-reveal-how-evil-ai-changing.html#commentsOffset

#Cybersecurity #AIsecurity #WormGPT #RSAC #TechSpot #Infosec #LMGSecurity #AI #EvilAI #RiskManagement #CISO #SMB #CIO #IT #ITsecurity #RSAC2025

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is it really 'evil' ai or just people being able to build more and better more sophisticated tools? It may end up helping advance field more rapidly - that's not evil that is good

#techspot.com

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