Welcome to Balance of Power, bringing you the latest in global politics. If you haven't yet, sign up here. It didn't take long for the tech bros assembled awkwardly on the podium for Donald Trump's inauguration to make their presence felt. On his first full day at the White House yesterday, Trump unveiled a $100 billion joint venture to fund artificial-intelligence infrastructure including data centers. The plan, led by OpenAI, Softbank and Oracle, aims to raise that amount to at least $500 billion. Not content with a sum equivalent to more than the entire economic output of Norway, the US president said he'd use emergency declarations and executive action to ease construction projects, including through easier access to energy. That's almost certain to mean relaxing requirements for clean energy to supply the massive demand for power: OpenAI has called for 5-gigawatt data centers, large enough to power entire cities. Trump with Oracle Chairman Larry Ellison, Softbank CEO Masayoshi Son and OpenAI's Sam Altman in the White House yesterday. Photographer: Aaron Schwartz/Sipa/Bloomberg It's a big-ticket announcement that bears Trump's hallmark: putting America first, no matter the cost to the planet. In rescinding Biden administration safety and transparency requirements for AI developers, Trump also removes the guardrails on a technology whose potential is as threatening as it is revolutionary. The tech industry welcomed the AI drive. For all Washington's focus, it's yet to be determined whether the US can maintain its lead over China in developing more sophisticated AI systems. Chinese startup DeepSeek has unveiled an AI model that it says is competitive with OpenAI's technology. TikTok's Chinese owner ByteDance is reported to be investing billions in AI infrastructure, while Huawei is touting its own AI chips. Europe, meanwhile, isn't part of the discussion, languishing on the sidelines without a similar AI champion, its efforts to steer regulation looking more antiquated by the day. With or without Europe's input, the global race to harness the technology is very much under way. The question is whether, freed of regulation, AI might end up controlling us. — Alan Crawford The EVE humanoid robot from 1X Technologies, left, and the GR-1 humanoid from Fourier during the Humanoids Summit in Mountain View, California, in December. Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg |
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