A lawmaker recently reminded the administration that winning the AI race isn't just a tech flex—it's about whose principles end up coding the next hundred years.
Senator Cruz drew a parallel to the internet's early days, arguing that whoever leads in artificial intelligence will basically write the rulebook for how society evolves. His pitch? Keep regulations minimal, let innovation breathe, and don't let competitors dictate the terms.
The stakes are pretty clear: this isn't about algorithms alone. It's a values game dressed up as a tech competition.
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PanicSeller
· 12-14 22:46
That's right, the essence of AI competition is a struggle of values—whoever holds the discourse power wins the entire era.
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GateUser-4745f9ce
· 12-13 20:46
Basically, whoever masters AI will have the right to speak, and there's no doubt about that.
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MoonRocketman
· 12-12 03:56
Ah, basically whoever grabs the AI launch window will control the equation of social evolution, with escape velocity directly embedded into the code.
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ApeShotFirst
· 12-12 03:53
Wow, now that's real! It's not about who has more GPUs, but whose values can last longer.
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ser_ngmi
· 12-12 03:51
Basically, whoever controls AI will hold the right to speak for the future—that's beyond question.
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GateUser-6bc33122
· 12-12 03:35
Basically, it's just trying to shake off regulation. I'm tired of hearing this kind of rhetoric.
A lawmaker recently reminded the administration that winning the AI race isn't just a tech flex—it's about whose principles end up coding the next hundred years.
Senator Cruz drew a parallel to the internet's early days, arguing that whoever leads in artificial intelligence will basically write the rulebook for how society evolves. His pitch? Keep regulations minimal, let innovation breathe, and don't let competitors dictate the terms.
The stakes are pretty clear: this isn't about algorithms alone. It's a values game dressed up as a tech competition.