Will AI [Science & Tech] Benefit From a New Cold War with China?
Will AI [Science & Tech] Benefit From a New Cold War with China?
Vicar Sayeedi
January 25, 2021
During the Cold War, the Soviet Union and the United States were engaged in a forty-six year, high stakes, multi-faceted race to demonstrate the superiority of the Soviet ideology of governance - Communism - and their central planned economy, versus that of the American and Western ideology of governance - Democracy - combined with the American economic model of free market capitalism. During the early years of ideological conflict, the Soviets presented America with a formidable challenge, specifically on the scientific and technological front. But in the end, the Western model secured a clear and decisive victory.
At times, the race became quite dangerous and heated: the Korean War in the early 1950’s, the failed Bay of Pigs invasion followed by the Cuban Missile Crisis of the early 1960’s, and the Vietnam War in the 1960’s and 1970’s are important examples. The Vietnam war, in particular, cost over 58,000 American lives and resulted in a great deal of domestic angst, political chaos and polarization within society. But at the same time, this unplanned ideological conflict between these new 20th century superpowers led to tremendous advancements in Western science and technology and the subsequent application of these advancements across a myriad of industries.
Today, America and the West are facing the prospect of a similar Cold War scenario with China. So many thinkers around the world are left wondering what the consequences will be. In a competition to demonstrate the superiority of the Chinese model of Authoritarian Capitalism versus the Liberal Democracy and free market economy of the United States, might the West realize similar gains as those extricated from the 20th century confrontation with the Soviets and if so, at what cost? This issue has emerged as a major point of debate between leading public intellectuals.
Since 2018, China has launched more rockets into Space than any other country. They have won the race to be the first to land a rover on the far side of the moon. In 2019, China launched the last satellite in a network of thirty-five satellites named BeiDou, thus completing their own independent global navigation system. The BeiDuo Navigation Satellite System is China’s answer to America’s Global Positioning System, more commonly known as GPS, and is 20 cm more accurate. China is also planning to build their own space station for interstellar research. They no longer accept being subjugated to the United States and the West, neither on Earth nor in Space, and they believe that any Empire that considers itself a superpower must have its own independent and world leading Space program.
These initiatives in Space demonstrate Chinese scientific and technical sophistication that has both commercial and military application: whether they are delivering a lethal autonomous weapon such as an AI-enabled missile to an enemy or whether that are delivering lunch to a customer, the precision of BeiDou will be critical. And at the same time, the Chinese now have independence in a key component of digital infrastructure with their own version of GPS. The completion of the BeiDou network along with their other Space programs has brought tremendous pride and prestige to China, and this prestige is a key promise enshrined in the Chinese Communist Party’s social contract with its citizens.
But China’s disadvantage as a new Cold War unfurls is that its scientific and technological ecosystem is rapidly shrinking and this reduces their access to industrial and intellectual dynamism. As China decouples from America and the West, they will lose critical access to a significant degree of Basic and Applied R&D as a consequence of waning relationships with Western academic and research institutions and industrial networks. Meanwhile, America and the West are in a good position to leverage longstanding transatlantic alliances within academic, industrial and political networks that were forged in the fire of the last Cold War with the Soviet Union. This is likely to be a significant advantage as the two Superpowers decouple.
Nevertheless, when we consider how active America’s Space exploration program was during the Cold War ideological battle with the Soviets, although not stagnant, today’s American Space program enjoys considerably less government investment as well as prestige in the minds of the country’s best and brightest science and technology students. The US is working to establish a lunar base by 2024 via the Artemis program but it desperately needs competition and dynamism to reinvigorate the society towards these goals.
Arguably, the unprecedented scale of an ideological and economic threat posed by a rising China is just what America needs. Economically, an ideological conflict with China is a far greater threat to America’s future than the ideological conflict with the Soviet Union ever was, even at its peak. The initiatives in Space with BeiDou and their moon rover demonstrate China’s genuine desire to be seen as a world leader. This, and a defense budget greater than that of the next four countries combined, means China will continue to push the frontier in interstellar militarized and AI-enabled space exploration and America and the West will have no choice but to redouble their efforts in this regard, as they did during the 1960’s. As previously mentioned, America has a distinct advantage left over from the Cold War with the Soviets: their network of global alliances. China lacks such a network of sophisticated and trusted allies in the Developed World so they will have to go it alone. Their vassal states in the Developing World will offer little economic and financial support or meaningful political cover so this will very likely be intensely challenging.
When we revisit the historical record, we are reminded that the Cold War was very dangerous and led to nuclear brinksmanship. But at the same time, the benefits were also extraordinary. As was the case in the post World War II era, we are once again facing a clash of strategies and a clash of political and economic systems. This new Silk Curtain is a test of whether American Liberal Democracy or Chinese Authoritarian capitalism will be the superior model for the realities of life in the 21st century. As a result, public intellectuals and thought leaders expect to see America begin to make enormous investments in infrastructure, multidisciplinary basic research, industrial Applied Research and Development and public education that it otherwise lacks the incentive and political will to pursue. Unquestionably, America will return to the moon and then onwards to other destinations with Artificial Intelligence and Biotechnology playing a leading role, particularly as initiatives such as the Human Connectomics project, which will map the neural network within the human brain on to silicon, come closer to fruition in the coming decades. [Connectomics is a US government initiative from the Obama era and is based at Argonne Labs in Chicago where it will have access to a purpose built and state of the art Aurora 21 Supercomputer.]
In 1957, the Soviet Union stunned the world with an unprecedented technological achievement: they put Sputnik 1, the first satellite in space orbiting at a speed of 18,000 miles per hour. The military significance of this bold and stunning success left a profound impact on an American Administration led by an aging World War II General, President Eisenhower. American society felt great fear and trepidation as the American government struggled to respond. The achievement left no doubt in the minds of many American leaders of the rapidly expanding technological chasm between the two superpowers.
Eventually though, the US did respond and with extraordinary resolve. For most of the 1960’s, America was spending 4-5% of GDP on science, technology and Space. Places such as Silicon Valley and Orange County in California, industries including Aerospace and Semiconductors and early versions of the Internet [DARPANET] are some examples of the long-term benefits of the ideological competition between America and the Soviet Union. By the 2000’s though, grants and investment in these areas had declined to a small fraction of their Cold War equivalent.
But today, China has more economic strength and resources than the Soviet Union ever had the capacity to direct towards space or towards any other endeavor. Under the 45th US Administration between 2017-2020, NASA’s budget was increased significantly. There was recognition amongst senior statesmen that Space is not merely a display of technological prowess as it once was in the 20th century, rather it now has real military, geostrategic and interstellar implications. During Senate confirmation hearings in mid-January 2021, the incoming Secretary of State, Antony Blinken stated that he agreed with his predecessor’s claim that China had committed genocide against its Uighur population in Xinjiang Province in the northwest of the Country and so there are no signs on either side that the Cold War between these two superpowers is likely to dissipate in the near future. In summary then, we are likely to see a steadily increasing sense of urgency in Federal grants and investment in advanced science and technology including Artificial Intelligence, Biotechnology and other Fourth Industrial Revolution attributes along with the strengthening of transatlantic alliances in the coming months and years as this new Cold War intensifies.
Vicar Sayeedi is a Computer Scientist and Engineer, a Lecturer and a Consultant. Vicar is also the author of several books. His most recent book is about Artificial Intelligence and is titled, The Génome Affair.
Vicar is most interested in the big questions facing humankind. He is particularly focused on studying at the confluence of the five great disciplines of Human History, Political Science and Thought, International Affairs, Science and Technology. This intersection offers a deep understanding and pedagogically important lessons of how advances in human endeavor have influenced and impacted civilization.
Vicar has been writing books, essays and poetry for many years. For the past 30 years, Vicar has worked in the Technology and Pharmaceutical industries. He is currently a Consultant in the Life Sciences Industry and lives in suburban Chicago with his wife and their three grown children [if they decide to visit during the holidays!]
You can find Vicar’s recent book on AI, The Génome Affair on Amazon at this link:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07YQ7M9Q7
The most recent episodes of Vicar’s ai & u! Podcast are on YouTube at the following links:
Episode 1 - https://youtu.be/yNYr28jtY_k
What is Artificial Intelligence? What is Human Intelligence?
Episode 2 - https://youtu.be/kAEgDNh1Nwc
How Did We Get Here? Machine Learning, Neural Networks & the AI Lexicon, Exciting AI Agents
Episode 3 - https://youtu.be/3PYCyv1pCgM
Deep Mind - How Powerful is Narrow AI? State Surveillance and Surveillance Capitalism
Episode 4 - https://youtu.be/WvobCMIM_H4
Impact on Societies That Possess Artificial Intelligence Versus Those that Do Not!
Episode 5 - https://youtu.be/4JVpvm4g79g
Surveillance Capitalism, Surveillance State, 4th Industrial Revolution, Bifurcation of Sapiens
Episode 6 - https://youtu.be/e1q2GgcWQok
AI, Blockchain & Quantum Computing - Implications for Global and National Governance
Episode 7 - https://youtu.be/4bDSUvrOdd4
Popular Perceptions of Intelligence, the Seat of Human Intelligence and Implications for AI
Episode 8 - https://youtu.be/3GjHqQZL7Pk
AI - Why Should I care? Plus Exciting Updates from Elon Musk and Neuralink!
Episode 9 - https://youtu.be/enpecqDecC8
AI - Excellence, Innovation & Genius
Episode 10 - https://youtu.be/UsriESlTjdA
Implications for AI as China and the West Decouple
Episode 11 - https://youtu.be/0CpaMb-yw3g
Artificial Intelligence: Ethics, Law & Society
Episode 12 - https://youtu.be/PLzodrLWMq0
AI & Lethal Autonomous Weapons Systems
Episode 13 - https://youtu.be/Lm_nrNyJRbA
AI & the Future of Work in Industry 4.0 – the 4th Industrial Revolution
Episode 14 - https://youtu.be/_3E1Mhr_Dt8
Artificial Intelligence and its Implications for Authoritarianism and Democracy
Episode 15 - https://youtu.be/IpMUqHOEd7w
Artificial Intelligence, Consciousness & the Future of Homo Sapiens
Episode 16 - https://youtu.be/mIf7_VMzGKo
AI and its Implications for America's Political Environment
Episode 17 - https://youtu.be/gsMRPnovZGI
Special Episode: Reading From The Génome Affair
Episode 18 - https://youtu.be/UxNxtWDCREM
Artificial Intelligence - Digital Tyranny, Datocracy and the Imitation Game
Episode 19 - https://youtu.be/Db8U0QQWWuY
Does Artificial Intelligence Really Replicate Human Intelligence?
Episode 20 - https://youtu.be/Np18AEq-6DM
AI & Rising Geopolitical Tensions Between China & The West
Episode 21 - https://youtu.be/fOMSvNiixA0
AI & In-vitro Fertilization [IVF]
Episode 22 - https://youtu.be/EQPpRhIV6Kw
AI & Human Intelligence: A Complex Relationship
Episode 23 - https://youtu.be/EAbQ7stY7JQ
AI Upends the World of Structural Biology
Episode 24 - https://youtu.be/Bsb1F8uoBpA
AI & COVID-19: An Extraordinary Contribution
Episode 25 - https://youtu.be/PqL5PCRc8tA
AI, Connectomics & Transhumanism: the Future of Humankind
Episode 26 - https://youtu.be/HI8Zjl8VM8U
Dramatic Upheaval Inside Google's Ethical AI Team
Episode 27 - https://youtu.be/TqWwJYc2GxQ
AI & Cyber Espionage | How Will the Sunburst Attack Affect Our Security?
Episode 28 - https://youtu.be/89BcThqgcfQ
AI & the Rapidly Escalating Threat from Deep Fake Videos
Episode 29 - https://youtu.be/zvOHRMmJNB4
AI, Facial Recognition Technology & The Digital Surveillance State
Episode 30 - https://youtu.be/br4ygfEWdk0
AI & Social Media | The Most Destructive AI We've Ever Seen?
Episode 31 - https://youtu.be/sOy12ii8zwM
The Democratization of AI & The 2021 Maiflower Expedition | Plymouth, England to Plymouth, MA
Episode 32 - https://youtu.be/bixdLL74reE
Sino-American Cold War | A Blessing in Disguise for America?
Episode 33 - https://youtu.be/tTRm312DgMc
AI & the Tyranny of Meritocracy
Episode 34 - https://youtu.be/FpPzC5VP6GM
In the Midst of Chaos and Pandemic | A Big AI Announcement From the Trump Administration
Episode 35 - https://youtu.be/bK3xCBwrG8w
Artificial Super Intelligence – Can We Control It?
Episode 36 - https://youtu.be/Rc60DQ0L86Q
A New America | Hope with a Big Dose of Caution
Episode 37 - https://youtu.be/UBenYYHbYqM
Will AI [Science & Tech] Benefit From a New Cold War with China?
Vicar Sayeedi
January 25, 2021
During the Cold War, the Soviet Union and the United States were engaged in a forty-six year, high stakes, multi-faceted race to demonstrate the superiority of the Soviet ideology of governance - Communism - and their central planned economy, versus that of the American and Western ideology of governance - Democracy - combined with the American economic model of free market capitalism. During the early years of ideological conflict, the Soviets presented America with a formidable challenge, specifically on the scientific and technological front. But in the end, the Western model secured a clear and decisive victory.
At times, the race became quite dangerous and heated: the Korean War in the early 1950’s, the failed Bay of Pigs invasion followed by the Cuban Missile Crisis of the early 1960’s, and the Vietnam War in the 1960’s and 1970’s are important examples. The Vietnam war, in particular, cost over 58,000 American lives and resulted in a great deal of domestic angst, political chaos and polarization within society. But at the same time, this unplanned ideological conflict between these new 20th century superpowers led to tremendous advancements in Western science and technology and the subsequent application of these advancements across a myriad of industries.
Today, America and the West are facing the prospect of a similar Cold War scenario with China. So many thinkers around the world are left wondering what the consequences will be. In a competition to demonstrate the superiority of the Chinese model of Authoritarian Capitalism versus the Liberal Democracy and free market economy of the United States, might the West realize similar gains as those extricated from the 20th century confrontation with the Soviets and if so, at what cost? This issue has emerged as a major point of debate between leading public intellectuals.
Since 2018, China has launched more rockets into Space than any other country. They have won the race to be the first to land a rover on the far side of the moon. In 2019, China launched the last satellite in a network of thirty-five satellites named BeiDou, thus completing their own independent global navigation system. The BeiDuo Navigation Satellite System is China’s answer to America’s Global Positioning System, more commonly known as GPS, and is 20 cm more accurate. China is also planning to build their own space station for interstellar research. They no longer accept being subjugated to the United States and the West, neither on Earth nor in Space, and they believe that any Empire that considers itself a superpower must have its own independent and world leading Space program.
These initiatives in Space demonstrate Chinese scientific and technical sophistication that has both commercial and military application: whether they are delivering a lethal autonomous weapon such as an AI-enabled missile to an enemy or whether that are delivering lunch to a customer, the precision of BeiDou will be critical. And at the same time, the Chinese now have independence in a key component of digital infrastructure with their own version of GPS. The completion of the BeiDou network along with their other Space programs has brought tremendous pride and prestige to China, and this prestige is a key promise enshrined in the Chinese Communist Party’s social contract with its citizens.
But China’s disadvantage as a new Cold War unfurls is that its scientific and technological ecosystem is rapidly shrinking and this reduces their access to industrial and intellectual dynamism. As China decouples from America and the West, they will lose critical access to a significant degree of Basic and Applied R&D as a consequence of waning relationships with Western academic and research institutions and industrial networks. Meanwhile, America and the West are in a good position to leverage longstanding transatlantic alliances within academic, industrial and political networks that were forged in the fire of the last Cold War with the Soviet Union. This is likely to be a significant advantage as the two Superpowers decouple.
Nevertheless, when we consider how active America’s Space exploration program was during the Cold War ideological battle with the Soviets, although not stagnant, today’s American Space program enjoys considerably less government investment as well as prestige in the minds of the country’s best and brightest science and technology students. The US is working to establish a lunar base by 2024 via the Artemis program but it desperately needs competition and dynamism to reinvigorate the society towards these goals.
Arguably, the unprecedented scale of an ideological and economic threat posed by a rising China is just what America needs. Economically, an ideological conflict with China is a far greater threat to America’s future than the ideological conflict with the Soviet Union ever was, even at its peak. The initiatives in Space with BeiDou and their moon rover demonstrate China’s genuine desire to be seen as a world leader. This, and a defense budget greater than that of the next four countries combined, means China will continue to push the frontier in interstellar militarized and AI-enabled space exploration and America and the West will have no choice but to redouble their efforts in this regard, as they did during the 1960’s. As previously mentioned, America has a distinct advantage left over from the Cold War with the Soviets: their network of global alliances. China lacks such a network of sophisticated and trusted allies in the Developed World so they will have to go it alone. Their vassal states in the Developing World will offer little economic and financial support or meaningful political cover so this will very likely be intensely challenging.
When we revisit the historical record, we are reminded that the Cold War was very dangerous and led to nuclear brinksmanship. But at the same time, the benefits were also extraordinary. As was the case in the post World War II era, we are once again facing a clash of strategies and a clash of political and economic systems. This new Silk Curtain is a test of whether American Liberal Democracy or Chinese Authoritarian capitalism will be the superior model for the realities of life in the 21st century. As a result, public intellectuals and thought leaders expect to see America begin to make enormous investments in infrastructure, multidisciplinary basic research, industrial Applied Research and Development and public education that it otherwise lacks the incentive and political will to pursue. Unquestionably, America will return to the moon and then onwards to other destinations with Artificial Intelligence and Biotechnology playing a leading role, particularly as initiatives such as the Human Connectomics project, which will map the neural network within the human brain on to silicon, come closer to fruition in the coming decades. [Connectomics is a US government initiative from the Obama era and is based at Argonne Labs in Chicago where it will have access to a purpose built and state of the art Aurora 21 Supercomputer.]
In 1957, the Soviet Union stunned the world with an unprecedented technological achievement: they put Sputnik 1, the first satellite in space orbiting at a speed of 18,000 miles per hour. The military significance of this bold and stunning success left a profound impact on an American Administration led by an aging World War II General, President Eisenhower. American society felt great fear and trepidation as the American government struggled to respond. The achievement left no doubt in the minds of many American leaders of the rapidly expanding technological chasm between the two superpowers.
Eventually though, the US did respond and with extraordinary resolve. For most of the 1960’s, America was spending 4-5% of GDP on science, technology and Space. Places such as Silicon Valley and Orange County in California, industries including Aerospace and Semiconductors and early versions of the Internet [DARPANET] are some examples of the long-term benefits of the ideological competition between America and the Soviet Union. By the 2000’s though, grants and investment in these areas had declined to a small fraction of their Cold War equivalent.
But today, China has more economic strength and resources than the Soviet Union ever had the capacity to direct towards space or towards any other endeavor. Under the 45th US Administration between 2017-2020, NASA’s budget was increased significantly. There was recognition amongst senior statesmen that Space is not merely a display of technological prowess as it once was in the 20th century, rather it now has real military, geostrategic and interstellar implications. During Senate confirmation hearings in mid-January 2021, the incoming Secretary of State, Antony Blinken stated that he agreed with his predecessor’s claim that China had committed genocide against its Uighur population in Xinjiang Province in the northwest of the Country and so there are no signs on either side that the Cold War between these two superpowers is likely to dissipate in the near future. In summary then, we are likely to see a steadily increasing sense of urgency in Federal grants and investment in advanced science and technology including Artificial Intelligence, Biotechnology and other Fourth Industrial Revolution attributes along with the strengthening of transatlantic alliances in the coming months and years as this new Cold War intensifies.
Vicar Sayeedi is a Computer Scientist and Engineer, a Lecturer and a Consultant. Vicar is also the author of several books. His most recent book is about Artificial Intelligence and is titled, The Génome Affair.
Vicar is most interested in the big questions facing humankind. He is particularly focused on studying at the confluence of the five great disciplines of Human History, Political Science and Thought, International Affairs, Science and Technology. This intersection offers a deep understanding and pedagogically important lessons of how advances in human endeavor have influenced and impacted civilization.
Vicar has been writing books, essays and poetry for many years. For the past 30 years, Vicar has worked in the Technology and Pharmaceutical industries. He is currently a Consultant in the Life Sciences Industry and lives in suburban Chicago with his wife and their three grown children [if they decide to visit during the holidays!]
You can find Vicar’s recent book on AI, The Génome Affair on Amazon at this link:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07YQ7M9Q7
The most recent episodes of Vicar’s ai & u! Podcast are on YouTube at the following links:
Episode 1 - https://youtu.be/yNYr28jtY_k
What is Artificial Intelligence? What is Human Intelligence?
Episode 2 - https://youtu.be/kAEgDNh1Nwc
How Did We Get Here? Machine Learning, Neural Networks & the AI Lexicon, Exciting AI Agents
Episode 3 - https://youtu.be/3PYCyv1pCgM
Deep Mind - How Powerful is Narrow AI? State Surveillance and Surveillance Capitalism
Episode 4 - https://youtu.be/WvobCMIM_H4
Impact on Societies That Possess Artificial Intelligence Versus Those that Do Not!
Episode 5 - https://youtu.be/4JVpvm4g79g
Surveillance Capitalism, Surveillance State, 4th Industrial Revolution, Bifurcation of Sapiens
Episode 6 - https://youtu.be/e1q2GgcWQok
AI, Blockchain & Quantum Computing - Implications for Global and National Governance
Episode 7 - https://youtu.be/4bDSUvrOdd4
Popular Perceptions of Intelligence, the Seat of Human Intelligence and Implications for AI
Episode 8 - https://youtu.be/3GjHqQZL7Pk
AI - Why Should I care? Plus Exciting Updates from Elon Musk and Neuralink!
Episode 9 - https://youtu.be/enpecqDecC8
AI - Excellence, Innovation & Genius
Episode 10 - https://youtu.be/UsriESlTjdA
Implications for AI as China and the West Decouple
Episode 11 - https://youtu.be/0CpaMb-yw3g
Artificial Intelligence: Ethics, Law & Society
Episode 12 - https://youtu.be/PLzodrLWMq0
AI & Lethal Autonomous Weapons Systems
Episode 13 - https://youtu.be/Lm_nrNyJRbA
AI & the Future of Work in Industry 4.0 – the 4th Industrial Revolution
Episode 14 - https://youtu.be/_3E1Mhr_Dt8
Artificial Intelligence and its Implications for Authoritarianism and Democracy
Episode 15 - https://youtu.be/IpMUqHOEd7w
Artificial Intelligence, Consciousness & the Future of Homo Sapiens
Episode 16 - https://youtu.be/mIf7_VMzGKo
AI and its Implications for America's Political Environment
Episode 17 - https://youtu.be/gsMRPnovZGI
Special Episode: Reading From The Génome Affair
Episode 18 - https://youtu.be/UxNxtWDCREM
Artificial Intelligence - Digital Tyranny, Datocracy and the Imitation Game
Episode 19 - https://youtu.be/Db8U0QQWWuY
Does Artificial Intelligence Really Replicate Human Intelligence?
Episode 20 - https://youtu.be/Np18AEq-6DM
AI & Rising Geopolitical Tensions Between China & The West
Episode 21 - https://youtu.be/fOMSvNiixA0
AI & In-vitro Fertilization [IVF]
Episode 22 - https://youtu.be/EQPpRhIV6Kw
AI & Human Intelligence: A Complex Relationship
Episode 23 - https://youtu.be/EAbQ7stY7JQ
AI Upends the World of Structural Biology
Episode 24 - https://youtu.be/Bsb1F8uoBpA
AI & COVID-19: An Extraordinary Contribution
Episode 25 - https://youtu.be/PqL5PCRc8tA
AI, Connectomics & Transhumanism: the Future of Humankind
Episode 26 - https://youtu.be/HI8Zjl8VM8U
Dramatic Upheaval Inside Google's Ethical AI Team
Episode 27 - https://youtu.be/TqWwJYc2GxQ
AI & Cyber Espionage | How Will the Sunburst Attack Affect Our Security?
Episode 28 - https://youtu.be/89BcThqgcfQ
AI & the Rapidly Escalating Threat from Deep Fake Videos
Episode 29 - https://youtu.be/zvOHRMmJNB4
AI, Facial Recognition Technology & The Digital Surveillance State
Episode 30 - https://youtu.be/br4ygfEWdk0
AI & Social Media | The Most Destructive AI We've Ever Seen?
Episode 31 - https://youtu.be/sOy12ii8zwM
The Democratization of AI & The 2021 Maiflower Expedition | Plymouth, England to Plymouth, MA
Episode 32 - https://youtu.be/bixdLL74reE
Sino-American Cold War | A Blessing in Disguise for America?
Episode 33 - https://youtu.be/tTRm312DgMc
AI & the Tyranny of Meritocracy
Episode 34 - https://youtu.be/FpPzC5VP6GM
In the Midst of Chaos and Pandemic | A Big AI Announcement From the Trump Administration
Episode 35 - https://youtu.be/bK3xCBwrG8w
Artificial Super Intelligence – Can We Control It?
Episode 36 - https://youtu.be/Rc60DQ0L86Q
A New America | Hope with a Big Dose of Caution
Episode 37 - https://youtu.be/UBenYYHbYqM
Will AI [Science & Tech] Benefit From a New Cold War with China?
Published on January 24, 2021 13:56
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