AI, China and Trump
Digest more
This is bad news for artists and media companies that want a say in how AI companies use their intellectual property.
2don MSN
At least $1 billion in Nvidia computer chips were smuggled into China in the three-months span after President Trump imposed export controls on the cutting-edge chips, according to a bombshell
As artificial intelligence (AI) continues to reshape industries and economies worldwide, two global powers—the United States and China—are charting starkly different courses on how to regulate this transformative technology.
The new framework suggests a strong US open-source AI network has “geostrategic value” because it could underpin businesses and academic research globally.
10h
Cryptopolitan on MSNChina appeals for standardization in AI governance days after Trump’s deregulation pushChina’s Premier Li Qiang spoke at the World AI Conference in Shanghai, calling for the establishment of an international institution to guide AI collaboration just days after Washington moved to loosen its industry oversight.
Chinese Premier Li Qiang warned that without a global consensus AI could become an "exclusive game" for a few countries and companies. It comes days after US President Donald Trump unveiled plans to slash regulations.
Tech companies selling AI to the federal government now face a new challenge: proving their chatbots aren't "woke."