The AI Daily Brief: Artificial Intelligence News and Analysis - The Accelerationist Age of American AI
Episode Date: February 13, 2025At the AI Action Summit in Paris, U.S. Vice President J.D. Vance made it clear: the U.S. is doubling down on AI acceleration, prioritizing development over regulation. His speech pushed back against E...uropean AI policies, advocating for a more aggressive approach to AI innovation. Meanwhile, the EU is scrambling to adapt, with leaders acknowledging that their regulation-heavy stance has hindered progress.Brought to you by:KPMG – Go to www.kpmg.us/ai to learn more about how KPMG can help you drive value with our AI solutions.Vanta - Simplify compliance - https://vanta.com/nlwThe Agent Readiness Audit from Superintelligent - Go to https://besuper.ai/ to request your company's agent readiness score.The AI Daily Brief helps you understand the most important news and discussions in AI. Subscribe to the podcast version of The AI Daily Brief wherever you listen: https://pod.link/1680633614Subscribe to the newsletter: https://aidailybrief.beehiiv.com/Join our Discord: https://bit.ly/aibreakdown
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Today on the AI Daily Brief, the extremely pointed speech from Vice President J.D. Vance,
who was effectively discussing an age of American AI.
The AI Daily Brief is a daily podcast and video about the most important news and discussions in AI.
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Hello, friends, quick note before we dive into today's episode.
I was racing to do this this morning before I had to travel down to New York for a couple of appointments,
but the script for the second time in two days has crashed, losing an entire part of the episode.
in this case, it was the headlines. And so unfortunately for today's episode, I'm going to have to go
live without the headlines. We will be back with a normal format tomorrow and apologize for the
inconvenience. But the main topic is really interesting, so at least there's that. Anyways, without any
further ado, let's talk about the accelerationist age of American AI. Welcome back to the AI Daily Brief.
Today we are talking about the AI Action Summit in Paris, and specifically the extremely pointed
speech from Vice President J.D. Vance. Now, by way of background, the conference is being used as a way
to reset the EU's stance on AI in recognition that they're falling behind compared to the U.S.
and China. On the opening day, 60 European companies and startups signed the EU AI Champions
Initiative, which seeks to establish the continent as a leader in AI. Comments from the summit
seem to tacitly accept that the EU's regulation-first approach has hampered adoption in the corporate
sector. Mr. CEO Arthur Mench said, the EU AI Champions Initiative comes at a pivotal moment for
corporate leaders to position Europe at the forefront of AI and transform our economy.
The time for debate and small-scale pilots is over. It is now crucial for European policymakers,
industry leaders, and startups to fully harness AI's potential.
Geneseu Furstenberg, managing director of VC firm General Catalysts who are hosting the event,
drew attention to the current difficulty with compliance. She pointed out that there are conflicts
between regulations and different industries, three different regulators with jurisdiction,
and very little standardization in how AI is dealt with.
When asked if the Champions Initiative is intended as a criticism of the EU Parliament,
Verstenberg said,
They have given us a great signal that they want to lean in and want to engage.
A lot of the conflict that we're currently experiencing is not intended.
So we're bringing the regulators together with the people that are actually in the field.
And there does seem to be some amount of substance happening there as well.
French President Emmanuel Macron announced a massive 109 billion euro investment package
for the French AI ecosystem to be deployed over the next few years. He sold the plan as the French
version of Project Stargate, noting that the spending was in direct proportion when adjusted for
population. France makes total sense as a home for this sort of large-scale data project,
given that it has 18 nuclear power plants and is a net exporter of electricity to the rest of
the continent. McCrone also said, for me, this summit is not just the announcement of a lot of investment
in France. It's a wake-up call for European strategy. He added,
this will be a unique opportunity for Europe to accelerate, to simplify our regulations, to deepen the
single market, and to invest as well in computing capacities. So that was where we were coming into
yesterday morning. But then was U.S. Vice President J.D. Vance, who was effectively discussing an age
of American AI. He made very clear from the first line where he was going to fall in this conversation.
He opened by stating, I'm not here to talk about AI safety. I'm here to talk about AI opportunity.
He continued,
Our administration believes that AI will have countless revolutionary applications.
To restrict its development now would not only unfairly benefit incumbents in the space,
it would mean paralyzing one of the most promising technologies we've seen in generations.
Hans' speech had four main points.
The first was that the administration would ensure that USAI continues to be the gold standard
and partner of choice worldwide.
Second, the administration's belief that, quote,
excessive regulation could kill a transformative industry just as it's taking off.
third, the conviction that AI must remain free from ideological bias and that USAI will not be co-opted
as a tool for authoritarian censorship. And fourth, that the administration will maintain a pro-worker
growth path for AI adoption. Vance said, AI, I really believe, will facilitate and make people more
productive. It's not going to replace human beings. It will never replace human beings.
I think too many of the leaders in the AI industry when they talk about this fear of replacing
workers, I think they really miss the point. AI, we believe, is going to make us more productive
more prosperous and more free.
Laying out the intentions of the administration loud and clear, Vance continued,
the United States of America is the leader in AI, and our administration plans to keep it that way.
The U.S. possesses all components across the full AI stack, including advanced semiconductor
design, frontier algorithms, and of course, transformational applications.
To safeguard America's advantage, the Trump administration will ensure that the most powerful
AI systems are built in the U.S. with American design and manufactured chips.
extending a highly conditional olive branch to the assembled global leaders, he said,
just because with a leader doesn't mean we want to or need to go it alone, of course.
Let me be emphatic about this point.
America wants to partner with all of you.
We want to embark on the AI revolution before us with the spirit of openness and collaboration.
But to create that kind of trust, we need international regulatory regimes that foster
the creation of AI technology rather than strangles it.
We need our European friends in particular to look at this new frontier with optimism rather
than trepidation. And this was a really key point, basically. Vance echoed many of the other conversations
happening at this event that basically argue that Europe is shooting itself in the foot. Bringing it back
to America, Vance explained that the Trump executive order seeks to establish a level playing field
for big tech and little while ensuring that all Americans can benefit from the technology.
He continued, we invite your countries to work with us and follow that model if it makes sense for your
nations. However, the Trump administration is troubled that some foreign governments are considering
tightening the screws on U.S. tech companies with international footprints.
America cannot and will not accept that and we think it's a terrible mistake, not just for the U.S.
but for your own countries. Vance referenced censorship of information access to adults,
massive compliance costs, and the EU's notorious fines against big tech firms as the major issues.
Touching on energy, Vance said, the AI future is not going to be won by hand-wringing about safety.
It will be won by building, from reliable power plants to the manufacturing facilities that can produce the chips of the future.
I mean, this speech just absolutely declared the AI safety era dead and gone.
pronounced the U.S. the leader of the acceleration, and invited U.S.'s friends and allies to join and
effectively feel the ACC. Vance closed by comparing AI to Lafayette's Revolution era saber, which he viewed
the previous night. He said, it got me thinking of France and my own country and the beautiful
civilization that we've built together with weapons like that saber, weapons that are dangerous
in the wrong hands but are incredible tools for liberty and prosperity in the right hands.
If we choose the wrong approach on other things that could be considered dangerous, things like
AI and choose to hold ourselves back, it will alter not only our GDP or the stock market,
but the very future of the project that Lafayette and the American founder set off to create.
This doesn't mean that all concerns about safety go out the window, but focus matters,
and we must focus now on the opportunity, to catch lightning in a bottle, unleash our most
brilliant innovators, and use AI to improve the well-being of our nations and their peoples.
And boy, were there not a lot of folks who had a banal take about this speech?
On the one hand was absolute rapture.
Based Beth Jaisos wrote,
This may be the most EACC speech of all time,
unfathomably based.
European entrepreneur Maria Schrober wrote,
This was a big FU towards the EU.
One, the U.S. will dominate AI.
Two, if you meddle policy-wise with U.S. technology, you'll pay for it.
Great speech from the U.S. perspective.
Big wake-up call for the EU and the world.
Catherine Boyle, who focuses on American dynamism at A16Z, said,
Incredible to see a political leader translate how a new technology
can promote human flourishing with such clarity.
Then on the other side was this take, represented by A.L. A.
girl who wrote, we're all dead. I'm a transhumanist. I love tech. I desperately want a lined
AI, but at our current stage of development, this is building the equivalent of a planet-sized
nuke. The reason is boring and complicated and technical, so mid-twits in power don't understand
the danger. So clearly two very different types of reaction to the same speech.
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Now, even though Vance's speech was clearly intended to provoke a reaction from EU lawmakers,
as I mentioned, there had already been a recognition that European regulation had gone too far.
During her speech, EU President Ursula von der Leyen framed the new AI law as being more about consistency rather than restriction.
She said, this is the purpose of the AI Act to provide for one single set of safe rules across the European Union,
instead of 27 different national regulations and safeties in the interest of business.
Still, she recognized the issue, adding, at the same time, I know we have to make it easy.
easier and we have to cut red tape, and we will.
Bonderlion also announced massive investment in AI data centers, unveiling a 50 billion euro
contribution to the 150 billion euro in committed spending from leading European firms.
She said, we want Europe to be one of the leading AI continents, and this means embracing a way
of life where AI is everywhere. Too often I hear that Europe is late to the race where the United
States and China have already gotten ahead. I disagree because the AI race is far from being over.
If you're European, even if you don't buy that, it is such a massive.
massive sea change in the tone of conversation that you have to be at least a little bit optimistic.
Now, one of the big intended outcomes of the Paris Summit was to sign a joint declaration on AI.
Not a treaty, of course, but rather a statement on shared principles on AI across the Democratic
nations. When a draft declaration was leaked late last week, it appeared to please approximately
no one. Journalist Shaquille Hashim commented on it. It barely mentions AI risks and completely
fails to follow up on previous summit commitments. Cambridge researcher Herbie Bradley said,
it says effectively nothing except for platitudes. It doesn't contain anything concrete around either
technical AI research or government testing of AI systems. Max Tegmark, MIT professor and the president
of the Future of Life Institute wrote, the Paris AI summit's draft declaration that's leaked on
X seems optimized to antagonize both the U.S. government with focus on diversity, gender, and
disinformation, and the U.K. government, completely ignoring the scientific and political
consensus around risks from smarter than human AI systems that was agreed at the Bletchley Park
summit, countries shouldn't sign this because it totally ignores the science.
and indeed, both the U.S. and the U.K. declined to sign the declaration. While the statement itself
was mostly empty symbolism, refusal to sign it was also a deeply symbolic gesture. Clearly,
this represents a symbolic break from the EU on AI policy. J.D. Vance has firmly declared that
the U.S. is primarily concerned with producing the best AI technology rather than the safest.
The U.S., according to that speech, is no longer deferring to speculative AI safety concerns
or dealing with slow-moving international regulations. It is focusing on moving fast to compete with
China, and in that pursuit, has declared that Allied nations are welcome to tag along,
but no longer have a place in setting the agenda.
Following the events on Tuesday, Anthropic CEO Dario Amade felt compelled to write a blog post
to present his views.
He referred to the Paris Summit as a missed opportunity, stating that, quote, greater focus
in urgency is needed on several topics given the pace at which the technology is progressing.
He highlighted three key issues to tackle at the next AI summit.
First, ensuring that democracies lead in AI.
Second, actually dealing with growing security risks.
and third, developing a plan to deal with the economic disruption of AI.
Now, one nuance of Amade's blog post is that this was not a call to slow down when it came to development.
It wasn't a contradiction of anything that J.D. Vance said.
Instead, it's almost more of a comparable haste in policymaking around it.
For example, if you look at this third bucket dealing with the economic fallout,
he's not saying we should slow down to deal with it.
He's saying that policy should be developed in parallel and at the same season.
speed. Overall, there are very different opinions around AI right now. Professor Kate Crawford
wrote, The AI Summit ends in rupture. AI accelerationists want pure expansion, more capital,
energy, private infrastructure, no guardrails. Public interest camp supports labor, sustainability,
shared data, safety, and oversight. The gap never looked wider. AI is in its empire era.
That may be the case, but when it comes to Western policymakers right now, there is definitely
a drag to the accelerationist side that's happening in a big way.
Interesting phenomenon to continue to watch, but that is going to do it for today's AI Daily Brief.
Appreciate you listening or watching as always, and until next time, peace.
