Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo says Donald Trump is a president-elect who for all of his aggressive talk is afraid to let America compete with the rest of the world, responding instead with tariffs and curtailing immigration.
President Joe Biden's outgoing administration plans to finalize rules next week cracking down on Chinese vehicle software and hardware, U.S. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo told Reuters. In September,
Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo said the new policy will help build a trusted technology ecosystem around the world.
Gina Raimondo: Well, they concentrated my mind very ... if the U.S. prevents U.S. businesses from selling equipment or technology to China, but China can buy similar product from a Japanese ...
The U.S. is imposing some of its strongest measures yet to limit Chinese advances in AI, aiming to block backdoors in other countries that Beijing could use to access technology.
The restrictions, which also include rules on weights for closed AI models, build on previously announced curbs on exporting certain technologies to China, with which the ... it that way," Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo told reporters.
Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo says Donald Trump is a president ... a risk that led Raimondo to ban the internet-connected autos made by China. “AI is by far the single biggest disruptive ...
The rules are “critical” to preserving U.S. leadership in AI, Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo said on Monday. Ultimately, the final rules will be left to the incoming Trump administration. Biden has left a few other China policy decisions to his ...
The United States is going to ban Russian and Chinese software in vehicles, according to the Department of Commerce, due to national security concerns.
The world's major powers are locked into an artificial intelligence arms race. But new rules announced by the White House on Monday seek to guarantee American supremacy in that race.
New controls go beyond China, setting quotas for about 120 countries; exports to 18 allies including Japan, UK, the Netherlands are exempt.
New AI tech regulations are designed to enhance national security, but have been branded as a competition stifling measure to keep the US ahead.