Governments seeking to regulate artificial intelligence (AI) face a classic trade-off between regulation and innovation. But in the case of this new, potentially world-changing technology, that trade-off has another dimension: geopolitical competition.
Governments aiming to regulate AI are also intent on developing a lead (or not getting left behind) in a technology that experts say has pivotal military applications. As a result, the world’s three largest economies are pursuing increasingly different regulatory regimes. The European Union has been the quickest to introduce regulations, while the United States has taken a wait-and-see approach. Meanwhile, China stipulates that its AI must “reflect the core values of socialism,” even as Beijing frames AI innovation as a national priority. As their paths diverge, the regulations chosen by these governments are likely to frame AI development—and with it geopolitics—in the decades to come.
This episode was originally released by Why It Matters on June 21, 2023
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Gabrielle Sierra
Podcast Host and Senior Producer
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Janet Haven
Executive Director, Data & Society, and Member, National AI Advisory Committee
Sebastian Mallaby
Paul A. Volcker Senior Fellow for International Economics, CFR
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