The US is increasingly intent on winning the AI race with China. Experts say this ignores the benefits of collaboration—and the danger of unintended consequences.
It was almost a year before a handful of Chinese AI chatbots received government approval for public release. Some questioned whether China’s stance on censorship might hobble the country’s AI ambitions.
President Joe Biden warned that an oligarchy was taking shape in America during his farewell address on Wednesday.
Beijing vowed "no bullying or coercion" would hamper its development and vowed to take "resolute measures" to protect China's interests.
But the AI revolution has only just begun. Today’s most powerful AI models, often referred to as “frontier AI,” can handle and generate images, audio, video, and computer code, in addition to natural language.
OpenAI Vice President of Global Affairs Chris Lehane stresses the importance of winning the A.I. race and describes how the U.S. can do so.
AI compute is the key to global power, driving economic, technological, and military dominance. The race to shape the AI future is accelerating.
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.
The 'Fast Money' traders debate Apple's mounting issues, including a decline in iPhone sales in China, and where they expect the stock to go from here.
Nvidia has purportedly disabled overclocking and multi-GPU support on the RTX 5090D to ensure its performance does not exceed U.S. export regulations.
President Joe Biden’s final days in office were all about cementing the United States’ well established lead over China in the market for artificial intelligence.