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Showing posts with the label international cooperation

AI Sovereignty Through Coalition: How Mid-Sized Economies Can Build Independence Together

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Mid-sized economies face a defining choice in the AI era: accept technological dependence on the United States or China, or forge a collaborative path that preserves autonomy while accessing frontier capabilities. With the United States controlling an estimated 74 percent of global high-end AI compute capacity and China holding roughly 14 percent, nations outside this duopoly risk losing strategic agency at a pivotal moment. The emerging solution is neither isolation nor submission—it is coordinated cooperation among countries that collectively possess the talent, infrastructure, and political will to develop sovereign AI systems. Research note: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute professional policy or strategic advice. Geopolitical dynamics, technology capabilities, and international cooperation frameworks evolve rapidly. Final strategic decisions remain with you or your organization. Key points The dependency dilemma: ...

Global Dialogue on AI Risks and Governance at the Seventh Athens Roundtable

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Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute professional advice. AI governance is a rapidly evolving field, and readers should consult with relevant experts for specific guidance. Decisions remain the responsibility of the reader. The Seventh Athens Roundtable on AI has become a pivotal event for discussing the governance of artificial intelligence. Held in 2025, it brought together policymakers, industry leaders, and civil society members to address the pressing risks AI poses to privacy, fairness, and safety. This year's Roundtable emphasized the need for international cooperation and multi-stakeholder dialogue to manage these risks effectively. Participants explored how governance frameworks can adapt to the rapid developments in AI technology. Setting the Stage: The Seventh Athens Roundtable on AI Governance The Athens Roundtable serves as a crucial platform for international dialogue on AI governance. Created to fost...

Ethical Dimensions of Scaling AI Compute Beyond Earth: Insights on Project Suncatcher

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Boundary-Era Warning: This article is a technical-ethical snapshot of space-based compute discussions as of early November 2025. It is informational only and not legal, investment, or policy advice. Off-planet infrastructure involves safety, licensing, and jurisdictional complexity; readers should verify details in primary sources and consult qualified experts. Any decisions based on this overview remain the reader’s responsibility. Project Suncatcher sits at the intersection of two pressures that, by 2025, started to collide in public view: AI’s appetite for electricity and Earth’s slow-moving infrastructure . When hyperscale campuses begin competing with communities for grid upgrades, cooling water, and land use, the conversation naturally drifts toward extreme alternatives. “Put compute in orbit” is one of them. What makes Suncatcher ethically interesting isn’t the romance of space. It’s the fact that space compute turns ordinary questions—energy accounting, data g...