An agenda for artificial intelligence, which was summarized in the US policy in the Silicon Valley Valley Milliardaires podcasts, as President Donald Trump relies on the ideas of the technical figures that supports his election campaign.
On Wednesday, Trump plans to reveal a “AI campaign plan”, which he ordered to the White House after his return in January. He gave his Tech advisor six months to develop new AI guidelines after revoking the Signature -Ki -Ki -Ki -Ki -Ki -Ki -Ki -Ki -Ki -Ki -Ki -Ki -Ki -Ki -Ki -President Joe Biden.
The unveiling is jointly organized by the cross-party Hill and Valley Forum and the All-in-Podcast, a business and technology show, which is organized by four tech investors and entrepreneurs, to whose AI Czar, David Sacks.
The plan and the associated business commands are expected to contain some well -known Tech lobby parking spaces. This includes the acceleration of the sale of AI technology abroad and the facilitating of the constructive energy-hungry data center building that is required for the formation and execution of AI products, according to a person who was communicated on Wednesday that was not justified to speak publicly and speak on the condition of anonymity.
It could also include some of the employees of the KI Culture War of the District of Risk Patients who supported Trump last year.
Block “Woke Ai” block
From Tech contractor
The liberal bias that you see in AI chatbots such as Chatgpt or Google Gemini has long been a rally point for the loudest Trump supporters in the Tech industry.
Sacks, a former PayPal manager and now Trump’s Top -Ai consultant, criticized “Woke Ki” for more than a year, which is driven by Google’s Rollout of a Ki -Image Generator from February 2024, who, when asked to show an American founding father, created pictures of black, Latin -American and Indian men.
“The AI is unable to give them precise answers because it was programmed with diversity and inclusion,” said Sacks at the time. Google quickly repaired its tool, but the moment “Black George Washington” remained a parable for the problem of the perceived political prejudices of AI, which was admitted by X owner Elon Musk, the capitalist Marc Andreessen, the Vice President JD Vance and the Republican legislator.
The recent advance of the administration against “Woke Ai” takes place one week after the Pentagon has announced new 200 million dollars with four leading AI companies, including Google, to deal with “critical national security challenges”.
Musk’s Xai also received one of the contracts, which was set up as an alternative to “Woke Ai” dreams. The company made its own challenges: At the beginning of this month, Xai had to make an effort to remove contributions made by his grok chatbot, who made anti -Semitic comments and praised Adolf Hitler.
Tightening of AI -calculation center permits
Trump paired the need for AI for huge amounts of electricity with its own advance of using in US energy sources such as gas, coal and core gain.
“Everything we strive for and that we hope means that the demand and the supply of energy must increase in America,” said Michael Kratsios, the director of the White House Office, in a video published on Tuesday.
Many tech giants are already on the way to build new data centers in the USA and all over the world. Openaai announced this week that it turned on the first phase of a massive data center complicated in Abilene, Texas, part of a project supported by Oracle called Stargate that Trump advertised at the beginning of this year. Amazon, Microsoft, Meta and Xai are also underway.
The Tech industry has pushed to facilitate the rules so that its computer facilities are connected to electricity, but the AI building boom has also contributed to the fact that the demand for fossil fuels is produced that is contributed to global warming.
General Secretary of the United Nations, Antonio Guterres, asked the world’s worldwide vast technology companies on Tuesday to pose the data centers entirely with renewable energies by 2030.
“A typical AI data center eats as much electricity as 100,000 houses,” said Guterres. “By 2030, data centers could consume as much electricity as the whole of Japan.”
A new approach for AI exports?
It has long been the policy of the White House among Republican and Democratic Administrations to contain certain technological exports to China and other opponents for national security reasons.
However, a vast part of the Tech industry argued that bids went too far at the end of his term in order to try to limit the exports of specialized AI computer chips to more than 100 other countries, including close allies.
Part of the motivation of the bidet management was to prevent China from buying third-party AI chips in places of third parties such as Southeast Asia or the Middle East.
It remains to be seen how the Trump government aims to accelerate the export of AI technologies in the USA and at the same time counteract China’s AI ambitions. The California chip maker Nvidia and AMD both announced last week that they received the approval of the Trump government to sell some of their advanced computer chips to China used to develop artificial intelligence.
Lisa Su, CEO of AMD, is one of the guests who want to take part in Trump’s event on Wednesday.
Who benefits from Trump’s AI campaign plan
There are piercing debates on how the AI can regulate, even among the influential risk capitalists who have discussed their favorite medium: the podcast.
While some Trump supporters, especially Andreessen, have supported an “acceleration approach” that aims to speed up the AI progress with minimal regulation, Sacks has described itself as a medium path of techno realism.
“Technology will happen. The attempt to stop it is like ordering the tides to stop. If we don’t, someone else will do it,” said Sacks in all-in-podcast.
On Tuesday, 95 groups, including unions, parent groups, environmental equality and privacy, signed a resolution that spoke out against Trump’s hugs and demands an “AI campaign plan of people” that “would primarily deliver to the American people”.
AMBA KAK, Co-Executive Director of the AI NOW Institute, which has contributed to making efforts, said the coalition expected that Trump’s plan “directly from the mouth of Big Tech”.
“Every time we say:” What about our jobs, our air, our water, our children? “You will say:” But what about China? “She said on Tuesday with reporters. She said the Americans should reject the argument of the White House that the industry was over -regulated and to fight” basic protection for the public “when AI technology progresses.
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Associated Press Writer Seung Min Kim in Washington contributed to this report.