White House, AI and Trump
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The White House said Trump’s AI action plan incudes requiring that developers’ chatbots are “free of ideological bias” in order to be get federal contracts.
President Donald Trump’s first major speech on artificial intelligence comes amid a technology arms race among Silicon Valley giants.
President Trump will deliver the keynote address at a White House artificial intelligence summit, just hours after the administration unveiled a new framework for its AI policy. The 28-page
President Donald Trump signed executive orders to reduce AI regulations, sparking debate over potential impacts on innovation and big tech.
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 order seeks to limit federal agencies from signing contracts for AI models unless they are considered “truth seeking” and maintain “ideological neutrality," warning that allowing bias into the models would distort its accuracy.
The Trump administration unveiled three-pillar AI plan focusing on American workers, free speech and protecting U.S. technologies on Wednesday.
In our system of government, it shouldn’t be necessary for a federal court to tell the White House “to stop violating the law.” And yet, here we are.
A U.S. appeals court on Tuesday declined to lift restrictions imposed by President Donald Trump's administration on White House access by Associated Press journalists after the news organization declined to refer to the body of water long called the Gulf of Mexico as the Gulf of America as he prefers.