Why Americans dread AI - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
观点 美国政治与政策

Why Americans dread AI

Silicon Valley encourages the view that the technology is unstoppable — and Trump seems to agree
00:00

{"text":[[{"start":4.5,"text":"America’s AI titans used to warn about the technology’s extinction-level threat to humanity. “Stop me before I harm the species,” was their gist. Then they radically changed their tune. Anybody today who questions Silicon Valley’s accelerationist drive is an “AI doomer” — a Luddite who might as well be on China’s team. Safety is woke. So too is worrying about your kids’ mental health or your future earnings. Anything that gets in the way of the US winning the superintelligence race is either uninformed or dumb. That includes most of you."}],[{"start":36.55,"text":"But you are in good company. It is rare for the US public to agree on anything these days. Fear of AI is as close to a national consensus as it gets. A clear majority says that AI will do more harm than good. In one recent NBC poll, AI’s net negative rating ranked below ICE, the disliked immigration enforcement agency. A sizeable share of both Democrats and Republicans oppose new data centres. Even strong voter preferences, however, are little match for the lobbying clout of America’s tech giants, especially with Donald Trump behind them.  "}],[{"start":71.6,"text":"By encouraging the view that AI, like the tides, is unstoppable, Silicon Valley has pulled off a public relations feat. That US politics is fatalistic about its ability to regulate what could be the most societally disruptive technology ever is worrying — especially in a republic celebrating its 250th anniversary. In practice, there is nothing inevitable about the speed and shape of AI, unless democracy renounces its say. “AI is not some deus ex machina,” says Karen Kornbluh, former director of the National AI Office. “It is humanity’s creation and our choice whether to exercise democratic control or not.”"}],[{"start":111.94999999999999,"text":"To be fair, Congress has displayed some appetite for pushback. Twice the Trump administration quietly inserted a “pre-emption” rule that would have banned AI regulation by the states. Left unsaid was that federal agencies would continue to act as cheerleaders for letting the industry do what it wants. "}],[{"start":129.5,"text":"In each case — Trump’s “big beautiful bill” last July, and again in the defence budget in December — public clamour forced the drafters to drop that two-page insertion. Congress having failed him, Trump issued an executive order that decreed what lawmakers had rejected. Among other AI industry bonuses, his March directive left responsibility for child safety to parents, not the AI chatbots. "}],[{"start":154.6,"text":"It would be wrong to describe Trump’s alliance with the broligarchs as populist. “Pluto-populist” fits better. Either way, his writ is not impregnable. Following last month’s preview of Mythos, Anthropic’s unprecedentedly powerful cyber security tool, Trump said AI platforms should seek approval for new models. This system will be voluntary, however, which makes it meaningless. Moreover, Howard Lutnick’s commerce department will be the adjudicator, which is like asking Trump to audit his own taxes."}],[{"start":185,"text":"Which brings us to China. Having done scant prep for the Beijing summit this week, Trump administration officials now say he will raise AI co-operation with Xi Jinping. This might pit Trump against Washington’s foreign policy consensus, which believes the US and China are in a zero-sum contest. But a Trump overture on AI could be helpful to Silicon Valley. Nvidia’s Jensen Huang wants to sell more advanced chips to China. Trump is frustrated with Taiwan’s stranglehold on high-end semiconductor production. Xi could win AI concessions from Trump with promises to buy more soyabeans and pledge not to shut off China’s rare earths spigot again."}],[{"start":225.3,"text":"It should escape no one’s notice that the tech sector is playing both sides of the China field. At home they are hawks. Abroad they are doves. On the one hand, they shower money on those in Washington who say that domestic regulation will help China. On the other hand, they lobby Trump to sell more of their best stuff to China. At some point, might this contradiction become a problem?"}],[{"start":247.35000000000002,"text":"Either way, Trump is unlikely to raise the broader AI risks that could be addressed only by a US-China joint effort. Any serious drive by a US president to hammer common AI principles out with China would also be a truth test. It could split Silicon Valley and the so-called Washington blob. But the prospect is hypothetical. The notion that Trump would negotiate global guardrails is as real as a chatbot’s hallucination."}],[{"start":274.05,"text":"The AI industry’s ace card with Trump is that its valuations fuel the stock market. There is thus a near-zero chance that he will permit serious regulation while he is president. Big Tech, not blue-collar America, is still very much Trump’s priority. "}],[{"start":295.5,"text":""}]],"url":"https://audio.ftcn.net.cn/album/a_1778638848_7428.mp3"}

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

美国股市投资者需关注的五大新趋势

主动型投资组合需要考虑诸如超大市值公司风险管理等因素。

被指充当“中国后门”的支付集团将部分员工撤出中国

澳大利亚创立的空中云汇在华盛顿与北京竞争加剧之际,正推进其在美国的扩张。

英国军方考虑允许在无人工批准情况下实施致命打击

官员推动在特殊情况下由机器自主决定打击目标。

一周新闻小测:2026年5月30日

您对本周的全球重大新闻了解如何?来做个小测试吧!

美股录得自2023年以来最长周度连涨纪录

受AI热潮以及各方对延长美伊停火协议的预期提振,金融市场走强。

从ESPN到白宫?

体育媒体主持人斯蒂芬•A•史密斯谈自己想成为下一个乔•罗根——以及可能竞选总统一事。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×