Jake Sullivan, President Joe Biden‘s national security adviser, suggested Monday that artificial intelligence poses the greatest geopolitical threat to the United States. Sullivan was asked during the penultimate White House press briefing of Biden’s term in office to assess the greatest threat to U.
President-elect Donald Trump is likely to maintain new US limits on global sales of AI chips by Nvidia Corp. and others, a top Biden administration official said, citing bipartisan national security concerns surrounding China’s pursuit of advanced technology.
President Biden issued an executive order Tuesday to "accelerate the speed at which we build the next generation of AI infrastructure here in America."
The world's major powers are locked into an artificial intelligence arms race. But new rules announced by the White House on Monday seek to guarantee American supremacy in that race.
Nvidia’s VP of government affairs, Ned Finkle, released a seven-paragraph statement critical of the rule and said the company “look [s] forward to a return” to the Trump administration’s policies.
With just days to go in his presidency, U.S. President Joe Biden is releasing a flurry of new measures that challenge China's chip-making and shipbuilding and limit Russian oil, while a ceasefire in Gaza is said to be in reach after months of failed talks.
Deal aims to give a new dimension to the world’s “premier tactical drone operating military,” company president says in interview.
The rules, unveiled by the White House, would cap shipments of advanced AI processors on both a company and a country basis