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President Joe Biden delivers a speech at the State Department on Jan. 13, 2025.

REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein

Biden wants AI development on federal land

The Biden administration issued an executive order on Tuesday to allow the US Departments of Defense and Energy to lease federal land for data centers. The executive action comes as Biden prepares to leave office at the beginning of next week. Calling AI the “defining technology of our era,” the White House said that expanding infrastructure around AI is a national security and military imperative.
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Midjourney

Biden has one week left. His chip war with China isn’t done yet.

Joe Biden is leaving office in less than a week, but his administration is still making a bid to expand restrictions on computer chip exports — potentially a lasting mark of his presidency.
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Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer delivers a speech during a visit to the Manufacturing Futures Lab at UCL in London, on Jan. 13, 2025, as he prepares to launch a plan to harness AI to spur growth and efficiency in the country.

HENRY NICHOLLS/Pool via REUTERS

British PM wants sovereign AI

On Monday, the British government announced the AI Opportunities Action Plan, Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s economic and technological development plan for artificial intelligence. Starmer’s goals include building a homegrown challenger to OpenAI, building data centers nationwide, and exploring renewable energy sources — including nuclear energy — to power the data centers.

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Two hands, one human and one robotic, touching each other in front of a pink background.

Photo by Igor Omilaev on Unsplash

Automation is coming. Are you ready?

Are you scared of automation? Maybe you should be. According to a new survey from the World Economic Forum as part of its annual Future of Jobs report, 41% of large companies plan to reduce their workforces as AI becomes more powerful. However, 77% of respondents also said they plan to “re-skill” or “up-skill” employees to optimize their operations.
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The OpenAi logo is displayed on a mobile screen in this photo illustration.

Jonathan Raa/Sipa USA via Reuters

OpenAI offers its vision to Washington

On Monday, OpenAI released its “economic blueprint,” a set of proposals for boosting artificial intelligence in the United States. The ChatGPT maker issued its proposals in the final week of Joe Biden’s administration with Donald Trump set to retake the White House on Jan. 20.
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A low-angle view of a video camera.

Photo by Jakob Owens on Unsplash

Hard Numbers: Cash for footage, Blackstone bets on AI data, Military tech is thriving, Adobe’s AI powers

4: Social media creators are selling their unused video footage to AI companies hungry for content to train their generative AI models. OpenAI, Google, and others are reportedly paying up to $4 a minute to license this footage.

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Francis Fukuyama on the new leaderless global order
- YouTube

Francis Fukuyama on the new leaderless global order

We are kicking off 2025 by looking at some of the biggest geopolitical risks coming down the pike, from Trump's return to the White House, the tariff wars, our worsening U.S.-China relationship, and conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East. What will end up being the biggest risk in 2025? Here's our hot take: It won't be Trump, though he's a symptom. The biggest risk of 2025 is that this becomes the year the G-Zero wins. As longtime fans surely know, the G-Zero world is when no one power or group of powers is willing and able to drive a global agenda to maintain international order. We have lived with this lack of international leadership for nearly a decade. But in 2025, the problem will get a lot worse.
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Podcast: The Top Geopolitical Risks of 2025, a live conversation with Ian Bremmer and global experts

Listen: It's officially the new year, and 2025 will bring a whole new set of challenges as governments react to the shifting policies of the incoming Trump administration, instability in the Middle East, China’s economic weakness, and a world where the global order feels increasingly tenuous. 2025 will be a year of heightened geopolitical risks and global disorder, with the world no longer aligned with the balance of power. So what should we be paying attention to, and what’s the world’s #1 concern for the year ahead? Each year, The Eurasia Group, GZERO’s parent company, forecasts the top political risks most likely to play out over the year. On this special edition of the GZERO World Podcast, Ian Bremmer analyzes the Eurasia Group's Top Risks of 2025 report with Cliff Kupchan, Eurasia Group’s chairman and a leader of the firm’s global macro coverage; Susan Glasser, staff writer at the New Yorker; and Jon Lieber, Eurasia Group’s head of research and managing director, United States. The conversation is moderated by Evan Solomon, GZERO Media’s publisher.

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