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[...]

Trump’s AI policy moves on his first two days in office and remarks at the 
White House on Tuesday showed him positioning himself as a strong supporter of 
the U.S. tech industry — while turning away from the Biden administration’s 
stance that AI technology requires both support and oversight. Biden’s 
executive order, some of which has been implemented by changes at federal 
agencies, focused on preventing risks such as algorithms that spread bias or AI 
assistants that could help terrorists build bioweapons.

“AI seems to be very hot,” Trump said at the White House on Tuesday. “It seems 
to be the thing that a lot of smart people are looking at very strongly.”

Trump was joined by OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, Oracle Chairman Larry Ellison and 
SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son who announced “Stargate,” a joint venture that will 
seek to spend as much as $500 billion over the next four years to build as many 
as 20 new data centers to support AI projects.

The warehouselike facilities, stuffed with thousands of powerful and 
electricity-guzzling computer chips, are essential to developing and running AI 
software like that behind ChatGPT. A boom in data center construction is 
straining the power grid in states across the United States as companies 
including Microsoft, Google, Amazon and Meta have spent billions of dollars on 
new facilities. But AI leaders such as Altman say many more of the facilities 
must be built for AI technology to keep advancing.

“I think this will be the most important project of this era,” Altman said at 
the White House on Tuesday. “We wouldn’t be able to do this without you, Mr. 
President,” he said, turning to Trump. Son said that SoftBank decided to move 
ahead with the Stargate project because of Trump’s election victory.

The $500 billion doesn’t include money from the federal government, according 
to a person familiar with the project who spoke on the condition of anonymity 
to describe plans that haven’t been made public. In addition to the companies 
creating Stargate, Dubai investment firm MGX, an investor in OpenAI, will 
contribute funding to the project. Microsoft and semiconductor manufacturers 
ARM and Nvidia will provide technology, OpenAI said in an announcement.

Trump’s industry-friendly first moves on tech policy were not unexpected.

OpenAI has been working on Stargate for months, and its CEO Altman had been 
pitching politicians on the idea of a major push to build up AI infrastructure 
a year ago.

Prominent Silicon Valley executives and investors, including some who 
contributed to Trump’s reelection, had long railed against President Joe 
Biden’s executive order instituting guardrails for AI technology.

Although certain industry leaders like Altman said some regulation was 
necessary, critics said the government would only get in the way of the 
technology’s development and prevent smaller, younger companies from being able 
to compete with more established ones. Months before the election, Trump allies 
were already drafting an executive order of their own that would review 
“unnecessary” regulations and launch “Manhattan Projects” to develop military 
technology.

Despite Trump’s more industry-friendly approach to AI, his emerging policy is 
not a complete reversal of his predecessor’s. Biden in the final days of his 
administration directed federal agencies to speed up the development of AI data 
center projects on federal land.

Trump said on Tuesday that he supported that policy. “That sounds to me like 
it’s something that I would like. I’d like to see federal lands opened up for 
data centers. I think they’re going to be very important,” he said.

Netchoice, a lobbying group with members including Google, Meta and Amazon, 
welcomed Trump repeal of the Biden-era AI rules. “His orders rolling back 
regulations on U.S. energy production and ending Biden’s artificial 
intelligence (AI) red tape wishlist are critical for America’s global 
leadership in technological development,” Netchoice said in a post on X. Amazon 
founder Jeff Bezos owns The Washington Post.

Proponents of AI regulation have argued that it is needed not only to ward off 
potential harms from the technology but also to support its economic 
development and adoption by providing people with confidence that AI is safe to 
use.

“A politically-motivated repeal with no thoughtful replacement is 
self-defeating for our country and dangerous for our people and the world,” 
Alondra Nelson, a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress, a liberal 
think tank, who also worked on technology policy in the Biden administration, 
said in a statement. “This will leave the American public unprotected from the 
risks and harms of AI and, therefore, unable to take up the benefits it might 
bring.”

Deborah Raji, a Mozilla fellow and AI researcher at the University of 
California at Berkeley, said that the repeal of Biden’s executive order, in 
combination with the Supreme Court curbing federal agencies’ power to set and 
institute regulations last year and Trump’s ambitions to empower business 
leaders, create a “Wild West era” for AI products. “They’re going to be 
empowered to build models and throw them everywhere, without a lot of regard to 
safety,” she said.

AI companies have been spending huge amounts of money buying computer chips and 
building new data centers to house them. The surge in data center construction 
has also pushed up estimates for how much electricity the U.S. will need to 
generate to power them, leading to some coal power plants that had been slated 
to be closed to be kept online.



On 22 January 2025 14:21:37 CET, Alberto Cammozzo via nexa 
<[email protected]> wrote:
><https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2025/01/21/stargate-500-billion-trump-ai/>
>
>President Donald Trump set about defining his new administration’s technology 
>policy Tuesday, hosting industry CEOs at the White House to announce a massive 
>private-sector investment in infrastructure for artificial intelligence that 
>could reach $500 billion.
>
>The announcement came after Trump on his Inauguration Day rescinded a sweeping 
>2023 executive order on AI from his predecessor Joe Biden that introduced 
>regulations on companies developing AI intended to prevent the technology 
>causing harm.
>

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