industry
The 3 big conflicts in AI race against China (axios.com)
Three major conflicts are shaping America's AI race against China in real time, with changing global dynamics shifting the terms week by week: The race with China on advancing AI models Conflicting federal vs. state laws in the U.S. European AI policy Why it matters: All three factors are fraught with politics and delicate dynamics, and all will help determine whether the U.S. continues to lead the world in advanced AI. What they're saying: AI leaders recognize that the technology is so big that it requires global cooperation, even with the fears that China is stealing U.S. technology or is not aligned with U.S. values. That's an especially relevant topic during President Trump's China summit this week. AI "transcends a lot of the prevailing or traditional trade type issues," Chris Lehane, OpenAI's vice president of global affairs, told reporters in Washington this week. He proposed a global governance system for AI which could include China: "There is an opportunity to really start to build something up globally, and have countries around the world, including China, potentially participate." The race with China: But U.S. officials have to navigate cutthroat competition while recognizing that communicating about safety with the other world leaders on AI is important. They also have to decide what advanced technology the Chinese market will have access to , a subject that divides Washington. U.S. officials are walking that tightrope this week: Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told CNBC Thursday that the U.S. and China would establish some sort of protocol for AI safety, but that doing so was only possible because the U.S. currently holds the lead in the technology. The U.S. lead may be slim, though: A Commerce Department analysis found DeepSeek V4 Pro, a leading Chinese model, is only about eight months behind the U.S. frontier. In a blog post Thursday, Anthropic argued for stricter export controls and steeling against Chinese Communist Party intellectual property theft to strengthen U.S. leadership in AI. In addition, Democrats and Republicans on the Hill are urging Trump officials to be careful while in China. Sen. Chris Coons (D-Del.) argued against allowing China access to NVIDIA's most advanced chips. Sen. Jim Banks (R-Ind.) wrote in a letter to administration officials that AI policy is a "particularly difficult domain" due to the "dual mandate of winning the AI race against [China] while navigating critical security challenges along the way." State vs. federal rules: The leading AI companies (and less-resourced AI startups), along with the Trump administration, have pushed for one federal AI standard, arguing that conflicting state-level laws will impede AI companies' advancement. But as state-level AI frontier safety laws have started to mirror one another, the leading labs are learning to love what OpenAI's Lehane has called "reverse federalism," or letting states lead on policy by passing similar laws. Both OpenAI and Anthropic came out
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