
US President Donald Trump urged US technology giants to stop the practices of overseas hiring, including practices in India and China, and instead focused on working places at home, India reported today.
The publication added that the notes were made during the peak summit of artificial intelligence (AI) in Washington, Washington, where Trump focused on what he described as “globalistic thinking” of the technical industry.
At the Fire address Trump, he accused chief technology companies such as Google and Microsoft, by earning on US freedoms while building factories abroad and employing foreign workers. “Many of our largest technological societies have harvested the blessing of US freedom in the construction of their factories in China, hiring workers in India and hiding profits in Ireland,” he said. “President Trump ended these days.”
The Trump, who called on the restored feeling of “patriotism and national loyalty”, demanded that Silicon Valley and the wider technology industry prefer American interests in the plant to control the AI. “We need American technology companies to be for America. We want you to put America in the first place. You have to do it. That’s all we ask,” he said.
The former president took this opportunity to uncover three new executive orders to transform the landscape of the AI country. The highlight of the announcement was the national strategy entitled to acquire a race aimed at speeding up the construction of AI infrastructure, such as data centers, and release of regulatory obstacles to support domestic growth in this industry.
Another executive order focuses on ensuring political neutrality in AI systems developed with federal funds. Trump criticized previous initiatives supported by the government, which emphasized diversity and integration, and claimed that such policies prevented technological progress. “We are getting rid of awakening,” he said, stressed that the AI tools used by public institutions must be simple ideological bias and must follow accuracy above all.
Trump also took a problem with the terminology itself, suggesting that the term “artificial intelligence” undermines the power of technology. “It’s not artificial, it’s brilliant,” he said, suggesting a possible rebranding of how AI is perceived in politics and public discourse.
The third Directive is aimed at strengthening the global competitiveness of AI products developed in the US. It supports the export of American AI solutions and requires development on end-to-end within the national borders to reduce relying to foreign supplier chains.
(Tagstotranslate) Donald Trump