Artificial Intelligence Isn’t an Arms Race
The United States and China must find their way to dialogue and cooperation on AI. A practical, nuanced mix of competition and cooperation would better serve U.S. interests than an arms race approach.
Tim Hwang is a former director of the Harvard-MIT Ethics and Governance of AI Initiative and previously served as Google’s global public policy lead for artificial intelligence.
The United States and China must find their way to dialogue and cooperation on AI. A practical, nuanced mix of competition and cooperation would better serve U.S. interests than an arms race approach.
The nature and instruments of warfare in a particular era are shaped—simply but fundamentally—by whatever it is that the major protagonists choose to contest at that time.