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Lenovo Denies Using Banned Chinese SSDs in Non-US Markets

WireByte Staff · July 13, 2026

Lenovo has denied selling laptops with Chinese storage devices banned in the US in non-US markets. A ThinkBook 14 G9 IPL was found to contain a YMTC SSD, but the laptop was destined for Germany, not the US. Lenovo's use of a Chinese SSD is notable due to Beijing's encouragement of local purchases and the shortage of memory and storage devices.

Key points

  • Lenovo has denied selling laptops with banned Chinese storage devices in non-US markets, citing a laptop destined for Germany.
  • The laptop in question, ThinkBook 14 G9 IPL, contained a solid-state disk made by Chinese company YMTC.
  • Lenovo's use of a Chinese SSD is notable due to Beijing's encouragement of local purchases and the shortage of memory and storage devices.
  • The US banned YMTC on national security grounds, but Apple reportedly wants the Trump administration to reconsider the ban.
  • China's National Space Agency (CNSA) successfully recovered the first stage of a rocket for the first time, using a ship-borne net.

Lenovo Denies Using Banned Chinese SSDs in Non-US Markets

Lenovo has denied allegations of selling laptops with banned Chinese storage devices in non-US markets. The controversy began when a ThinkBook 14 G9 IPL was found to contain a solid-state disk made by Chinese company YMTC.

According to Lenovo, the laptop in question was destined for Germany, not the US, where YMTC is banned on national security grounds. Lenovo's use of a Chinese SSD is notable due to Beijing's encouragement of local purchases and the shortage of memory and storage devices.

The US ban on YMTC has been a subject of debate, with Apple reportedly wanting the Trump administration to reconsider the ban to help meet the demand for iThings.

Meanwhile, China's National Space Agency (CNSA) has made a significant breakthrough in space technology, successfully recovering the first stage of a rocket for the first time using a ship-borne net.

Sources

WireByte Staff — Editorial Team

The WireByte editorial team synthesises technology news from multiple primary sources, verifies the facts, and links every source. Articles are produced with AI assistance and reviewed under our editorial policy.