AI, Trump and action plan
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Despite the Senate’s July 1 vote to protect states’ rights to keep residents safe, a moratorium is expected to once again rear its ugly head.
Donald Trump unveiled his administration’s “AI Action Plan”—a document that details, in 23 pages, the president’s “vision of global AI dominance” and offers a road map for America to achieve it. The upshot?
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,
OpenAI signs the EU AI Code while Meta rejects it revealing divergent strategies on regulation, market expansion, and the future of global AI governance.
The Trump administration on Wednesday unveiled its AI action plan, a package of initiatives and policy recommendations meant to cement the United States as a global leader in a technology that’s expected to be as influential as the internet itself.
Earlier this month, an effort by Big Tech to once again forestall any regulation of its products — no matter the serious harms they cause, even to children — failed
Artificial intelligence (AI) in health care is rapidly advancing beyond traditional applications. Autonomous AI agents are gaining significant attention for their potential to fundamentally transform medicine.
My lawsuit in Hawaii lays out the safety issues in OpenAI’s products and how they could irreparably harm both Hawaii and the rest of the U.S.