Trump, AI and Action Plan
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President Donald Trump called for renaming Artificial Intelligence at a high-profile AI summit on Wednesday which was hosted by top tech leaders and investors including Al Czars' David Sucks. As he outlined his vision for US dominance in the sector by slashing key regulations,
The president’s plan for an artificial intelligence-driven future has garnered backlash from allies who are disturbed by its tech bro-friendly proposals.
US President Donald Trump has signed America's ‘AI Action Plan’, which seeks to boost innovation, infrastructure and the country's lead in the field. Later speaking at an AI Summit, he expressed wanting to rename artificial intelligence,
Trump’s AI-export order directs the Commerce Department to establish a program to support the development and deployment of “full-stack, end-to-end packages” overseas, including “hardware, data systems, AI models, cybersecurity measures” that have applications for the healthcare, education, agriculture, and transportation sectors.
The Trump administration released a new artificial intelligence blueprint on Wednesday that aims to loosen environmental rules and vastly expand AI exports to allies, in a bid to maintain the American edge over China in the critical technology.
The Trump administration’s new AI policy blueprint seeks to make American technology the standard for artificial intelligence globally by making it easier for US allies to acquire crucial hardware and software,
1hon MSN
DOGE plans to use AI to identify 50% of 200,000 federal regulations that can be eliminated by Trump - DOGE tool reportedly in use at housing and consumer protection agencies already, with goal of slas
Speaking at the AI Summit in Washington, D.C., President Donald Trump expressed his dislike for the term "Artificial Intelligence," stating, "We should change the name. I actually mean that. I don't like the name artificial anything because it's not artificial.
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WATE 6 On Your Side on MSNHow Trump’s AI plan may impact energy costsElectricity demand from data centers worldwide is set to more than double by 2030, to slightly more than the entire electricity consumption of Japan today.
Regardless of what powers AI, the simple law of supply and demand makes it all but certain that costs for consumers will rise.