Why both parties must step back to let AI innovate
The accelerating competition for artificial intelligence dominance is changing everything — our lives, the world’s economy, and public policy. As the race for AI intensifies, we can’t allow shortsightedness, panic over the unknown, or desire for quick political wins to shape policies with permanent long-term consequences. The economic implications of the AI age will be […]
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The accelerating competition for artificial intelligence dominance is changing everything — our lives, the world’s economy, and public policy. As the race for AI intensifies, we can’t allow shortsightedness, panic over the unknown, or desire for quick political wins to shape policies with permanent long-term consequences. The economic implications of the AI age will be larger than the industrial and digital ages combined. Allow that to sink in. Recommended Stories Democrats should support critical intelligence program Freedom isn’t $65,000. How free trade creates cheaper trucks America’s behavioral sink and the rise of broken families The AI race shouldn’t be a playground for political stunts. Unfortunately, Washington is treating this generational shift as such. Sen.
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Excerpt limited to ~120 words for fair-use compliance. The full article is at Washington Examiner.