Trump, AI Plan and Global Standard
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President Donald Trump on Wednesday unveiled a sweeping new plan for America’s “global dominance” in artificial intelligence, proposing to cut back environmental regulations to speed up the construction of AI supercomputers while promoting the sale of U.S.-made AI technologies at home and abroad.
The Trump administration released a new artificial intelligence blueprint on Wednesday that aims to loosen environmental rules and vastly expand AI exports to allies, in a bid to maintain the American edge over China in the critical technology.
"We believe we're in an AI race, and we want the United States to win that race," Trump administration crypto tsar David Sacks told reporters. The AI plan promises to build data centre infrastructure while also eradicating "ideological bias", but critics said it was a giveaway to Big Tech.
The remarks, which came during a keynote speech at a summit hosted by the All-In Podcast, follow President Donald Trump’s newly released AI Action Plan.
The AI Action Plan released by the US government on Wednesday recommends easing the way for data centers and other AI infrastructure by reducing regulations.
The Trump administration's AI policy covers everything from the future of work to state regulation and censorship. Here's what you need to know.
President Trump unveiled his approach to the development of AI. Surrounded by some of the biggest names in tech, he signed three executive orders. One targets what Trump called "ideological bias" in AI chatbots,
The administration’s long-awaited AI Action Plan gives Silicon Valley the green light.
The AI Action Plan pretty much frees up AI companies to do what they want, but it also supports the use of open source for AI. What that means is one big open question.
A new federal roadmap promises faster AI innovation, deregulated infrastructure, and bold international dominance, but not without controversy.
The president’s executive order could reshape chatbots’ politics. But experts say training AI models to be neutral is easier said than done.
Stolen data can be sold on the dark web to criminals who use it to commit identity theft, insurance fraud or blackmail. To restore disrupted systems, criminals can demand millions of euros — hackers, for instance, wanted $4.5 million for the return of the stolen data after a cyberattack on Hospital Clínic in Barcelona. The hospital refused to pay.