AI Arms Race | |||||||
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Part of the Artificial Intelligence Cold War, Second Cold War | |||||||
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Main Competitors | |||||||
Other Major Competitors India, Russia, Israel, Singapore, Japan, South Korea, Germany, United Kingdom, France, Canada | |||||||
Key Figures | |||||||
Other Major Key figures Narendra Modi, Vladimir Putin, Benjamin Netanyahu, Lawrence Wong, Shigeru Ishiba, Yoon Suk Yeol, Olaf Scholz, Keir Starmer, Emmanuel Macron, Justin Trudeau | |||||||
Major AI Initiatives | |||||||
Other Major AI Initiatives DRDO, Tata, Reliance, Yandex, Sukhoi, Mobileye, IAI, Samsung, Siemens | |||||||
Investments | |||||||
Est. $300 billion Est. $200 billion (China, over the last decade) | |||||||
Ethical concerns in AI | |||||||
AI regulation concerns Regulation in other countries DPDP Act 2023 Data Protection Act 2018 GDPR | |||||||
Potential for international regulation |
A military artificial intelligence arms race is an arms race between two or more states to develop and deploy lethal autonomous weapons systems (LAWS). Since the mid-2010s, many analysts have noted the emergence of such an arms race between superpowers for better military AI,[1][2] driven by increasing geopolitical and military tensions.
An AI arms race is sometimes placed in the context of an AI Cold War between the United States, Russia, and China.[3]