international talent
The US-China Tech Wars: China's Immigration Disadvantage
Earlier this year, a Chinese technology executive published an opinion piece arguing that size is China's greatest asset in technology competition with the United States today. His argument was simple: Innovation in emerging technologies such as artificial intelligence is partly a function of absolute numbers of scientists and engineers, and, as China continues to expand its domestic talent pipeline, its strength in numbers will soon far exceed that of the United States. Many in Washington seem to agree. The White House's education strategy draws motivation from China's rapidly increasing number of university graduates. Experts lament the United States' dependence on international talent and draw analogies with Sputnik to call for crisis-level educational spending levels similar to those in the post-Sputnik era.
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- Asia > Singapore (0.14)
- Asia > China > Beijing > Beijing (0.05)
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- Government > Regional Government > North America Government > United States Government (1.00)
- Government > Immigration & Customs (1.00)
- Education > Curriculum > Subject-Specific Education (0.69)
US National AI Strategy: Recent Developments and Shortcomings
Artificial Intelligence is dynamically changing the landscape of the world and it is expected to dramatically affect all significant aspects of human life as well. The technology that simulates intelligent behavior in machines has enabled people to process. Analyze and transform information and develop a whole novel industry. For such reasons, countries like America and China are eagerly ready to steal AI's thunder to gain leadership and supremacy in this space. AI is significantly bringing about economic, political and military strength across any country in today's age. Owing to such advents, it is crucial for the USA to get AI right into its system and to start with the development, first step is always creating a meaningful strategy.
- North America > United States (0.99)
- Asia > China (0.29)
- Government > Regional Government (0.73)
- Government > Immigration & Customs (0.51)
The United States Needs a Strategy for Artificial Intelligence
In the coming years, artificial intelligence will dramatically affect every aspect of human life. AI--the technologies that simulate intelligent behavior in machines--will change how we process, understand, and analyze information; it will make some jobs obsolete, transform most others, and create whole new industries; it will change how we teach, grow our food, and treat our sick. The technology will also change how we wage war. For all of these reasons, leadership in AI, more than any other emerging technology, will confer economic, political, and military strength in this century--and that is why it is essential for the United States to get it right. That begins with creating a national strategy for AI--a whole-of-society effort that can create the opportunities, shape the outcome, and prepare for the inevitable challenges for U.S. society that this new technological era will bring.
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- Asia > China > Beijing > Beijing (0.05)
America Desperately Needs AI Talent, Immigrants Included
DoD clearly has recognized artificial intelligence (AI) as the next game-changer in military competition, with the Pentagon and the services pouring money into numerous development programs. Indeed, mastering AI and machine learning will be crucial to the new way of war envisioned by Pentagon leadership: Multi-Domain Operations. But the US government may be shooting itself in the foot by overlooking a key problem: a lack of American AI specialists, argues Megan Lamberth co-author of "The American AI Century: A Blueprint for Action," a new report from the Center for New American Security. The United States is engaged in a global technology competition in artificial intelligence. But while the US government has shown commitment to developing AI systems that will positively transform the American economy and national security, the country has neglected its most important resource: talent.
- North America > United States (1.00)
- Asia > China (0.05)