AI, Joe Biden and data center
US president Joe Biden just issued a 40-page executive order that aims to bolster federal cybersecurity protections, directs government use of AI—and takes a swipe at Microsoft’s dominance.
Developers will be required to use clean power sources to fully meet the sky-high energy demands of several new data centers.
President Joe Biden’s final days in office were all about cementing the United States’ well established lead over China in the market for artificial intelligence.
President Joe Biden has proposed a new framework to limit the export of advanced computer chips used to develop artificial intelligence.
President Joe Biden has signed an ambitious executive order on artificial intelligence that seeks to ensure the infrastructure needed for advanced AI operations like data centers can be built quickly and at scale in the United States.
The Biden administration is proposing a new framework for the exporting of the advanced computer chips used to develop artificial intelligence, an attempt to balance national security concerns about the technology with the economic interests of producers and other countries.
Trump will cancel out any initiative for commercializing and deploying clean energy as soon as he takes office: Analyst.
The order will direct the Department of Defense and the Department of Energy to lease federal sites where the private sector can build AI infrastructure, he said.
Donald Trump plans to enter the White House Monday with a show of executive force to carry out a sweeping set of campaign promises for Day One. But just days before inauguration, senior aides continue to debate key aspects of many of his top agenda items,
Trump arrives in D.C. with Melania and Barron as inauguration ceremony moved inside by freezing weather: Live - President-elect says he has ordered inauguration and speeches to take place in the Capit
TikTok faces a U.S. ban starting on Sunday if it does not cut ties with ByteDance, although President-elect Donald Trump said on Saturday he would likely give the short-video social-media platform a 90-day reprieve on Monday.