DeepSeek’s gambit may have backfired because its CEO identified export controls as his top challenge. Read more at straitstimes.com.
Just a week after leaving former President Joe Biden's cabinet, ex-Rhode Island Gov. Gina Raimondo secures her next gig.
One week out from leaving the presidential cabinet, Gina Raimondo has already found her first landing spot. The Council on Foreign Relations, an influential research organization founded in 1922, announced Monday that Raimondo will join the group as a distinguished fellow.
Former Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo will join the Council on Foreign Relations as a distinguished fellow and co-chair of a new task force on economic security, the think tank announced Monday.
DeepSeek made the news with its R1 model and suggestions it provided competitive large language model quality. Read more about the potential impact for US companies.
Fresh of her high-profile role as U.S. commerce secretary, Raimondo will join the Council on Foreign Relations.
Artificial intelligence has been at the center of the U.S.-China technology battle, fueling a so-called AI arms race and a spate of export controls from the U.S. aimed at restricting China’s access to critical advanced technology.
Aggressors in these types of attacks have the advantage over the defenders, and China cannot be talked out of spying. But that does not mean these attacks should just be endured. The new Trump administration can better stymie its adversaries by modernizing technology,
AI competition is not a zero-sum game. Instead, the world’s superpowers need to work together to make sure AI benefits humanity.
Today, the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) announced that Gina Raimondo—the former U.S. secretary of commerce and governor of Rhode Island—will join CFR, based in its Washington, DC, office, as a
Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo testifies during a hearing on Capitol Hill ... a risk that led Raimondo to ban the internet-connected autos made by China. “AI is by far the single biggest disruptive force in our economy now and for the decade to ...
Trump can damage China’s economy with trade penalties. But tech restrictions might hurt more in the long term.