Both Silicon Valley and the U.S. government concur on the necessity of significant investment in AI infrastructure, despite its error-prone nature and high energy demands. The U.S. asserts its intention to lead the AI race against China, focusing on achieving research breakthroughs and setting standards. Advocates warn of a binary choice between U.S.-developed AI, which embodies democratic values, and a Chinese version controlled by the Communist Party. Historical parallels are drawn with prior scientific races, indicating challenges in establishing clear objectives for AI development.
America is the country that started the AI race. And as president of the United States, I'm here today to declare that America is going to win it.
The U.S. and China are in a head-to-head competition to win the future of AI by achieving research breakthroughs, establishing technology standards, and breaking the AGI barrier.
The world faces a binary choice between free, U.S.-developed AI imbued with democratic values or a Chinese alternative that's under the thumb of the Communist Party.
With AI, U.S. leaders are once again saying the race is on - but this time the scorecard is even murkier.
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