AI, Trump and Action Plan
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President Trump is facing growing pushback on multiple fronts over his administration’s decision to allow Nvidia to sell its H20 chips to China, a move that critics argue could give Beijing a leg up in the race to develop artificial intelligence (AI).
The Trump administration published its much-anticipated AI Action Plan Wednesday, signaling a sharp shift away from former President Biden’s cautious approach to addressing the risks of AI, and toward a focus on speed,
Star founders, Beijing officials and deep-pocketed financiers converge on Shanghai by the thousands this weekend to attend China’s most important AI summit. At the top of the agenda: how to propel Beijing’s ambitions to leapfrog the US in artificial intelligence — and profit off that drive.
Technology Technology The Big Story Trump’s China chip reversal faces resistance President Trump is facing growing pushback on multiple fronts over his
Kevin Hassett, White House National Economic Adviser, highlighted President Trump's strategy to allow Nvidia's H20 AI chips to be shipped to China. This move aims to curb China's advancements in chip technology,
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The Trump administration just revealed America's AI Action Plan, and it's set to remove red tape in order to speed up development in the U.S.
This is bad news for artists and media companies that want a say in how AI companies use their intellectual property.
The AI Action Plan offers a path, but not a concrete plan, for what the administration is thinking when it comes to chip export restrictions.
The 24-page plan outlines over 90 federal actions focused on three areas of focus: increasing private-sector innovation, expanding AI-related infrastructure and exporting American AI. It follows President Donald Trump's January executive order directing the creation of an "AI Action Plan" within 180 days.
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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.
After previously saying that the US would block exports of key AI chips to China, Donald Trump's administration has backtracked.