White House, AI and Biden
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Trump on Wednesday is planning to reveal an “AI Action Plan” he ordered after returning to the White House in January. He gave his tech advisers six months to come up with new AI policies after revoking President Joe Biden’s signature AI guardrails on his first day in office.
The remarks, which came during a keynote speech at a summit hosted by the All-In Podcast, follow President Donald Trump’s newly released AI Action Plan.
The suppression or distortion of factual information about race or sex; manipulation of racial or sexual representation in model outputs; incorporation of concepts like critical race theory, transgenderism, unconscious bias, intersectionality, and systemic racism; and discrimination on the basis of race or sex.
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Cryptopolitan on MSNWhite House rolls out bold AI strategy to accelerate innovationWhite House AI czar David Sacks even commented on the policies, “To win the AI race, the US must lead in innovation, infrastructure, and global partnerships. At the same time, we must center American workers and avoid Orwellian uses of artificial intelligence. This Action Plan provides a roadmap for doing that.”
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Wednesday she does not think President Trump supports federal agencies contracting with Elon Musk’s AI company. “I don’t think so,
Google, Microsoft, Amazon and Meta have thrown their weight behind numerous initiatives designed to boost their AI efforts, from an unsuccessful campaign to ban states from regulating the technology for a decade, to lobbying for government support to build vast data centres and new energy sources to power them.
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Cryptopolitan on MSNOver 500 organizations have lobbied the White House and Congress on AIA race is on to influence Washington’s artificial intelligence policies as the industry continues to grow and the new administration encourages embracing the technology in the US. According to an analysis of federal disclosures by the Financial Times,
President Donald Trump’s plan to boost artificial intelligence and build data centers across the U.S. could speed up a building boom that was already expected to strain the nation’s ability to