In concreto, cosa suggerisci?
Cordialmente, Duccio

Il giorno gio 23 gen 2025 alle ore 11:44 Marco A. Calamari <
[email protected]> ha scritto:

> On gio, 2025-01-23 at 11:29 +0100, alessandro marzocchi wrote:
>
> Concordo: *c**i vuole un modello di sviluppo europeo ben supportato da
> politiche einvestimenti.*
>
>
> Buongiorno a tutti.
>
>
> E' vero, sognare è lecito e comprensibile.
>
> Ma in realtà bisogna invece semplicemente  prepararsi al peggio, cercando
> di prevederlo per limitare i danni.
>
> Altrimenti significa delirio di onnipotenza....
>
> JM2C.   Marco
>
>
> Cordialmente, Duccio (Alessandro Marzocchi)
> PS
> c'è già chi ha mandato Trump a quel paese [1], l'europarlamentare di
> estrema destra Anders Vistisen[2]
> [1]
> https://www.repubblica.it/esteri/2025/01/22/video/anders_vistisen_eurodeputato_danese_insulta_trump_alleuroparlamento-423954612/
> [2]https://www.europarl.europa.eu/meps/en/124875/ANDERS_VISTISEN/home
>
>
>
> Date: Thu, 23 Jan 2025 09:06:20 +0100
> From: Guido Vetere <[email protected]>
> Subject: Re: [nexa] Trump lauds $500BN ‘Stargate’ AI project and
>         slashes Biden tech regulations - The Washington Post
>
> C'è qualcuno - namely: Altman - perfino più pazzo di Musk.
> Immaginiamo che spendano tutti i dollari del mondo in un datacenter
> grosso come la Groenlandia (dopo l'annessione).
> Alla fine cosa otterranno? I limiti della ragione, umana o automatica
> che sia, sono invalicabili tanto quanto quelli fisici.
> L'umanità consiste proprio nello stare dentro questi limiti, ed anche
> l'AI è utile finché li rispetta.
> Questo è il momento buono per mandare gli yankee pazzi a quel paese.
> Certo, ci vorrà qualcosa di più di quel ditino alzato che si chiama AI Act.
> Ci vorrà un modello di sviluppo europeo ben supportato da politiche e
> investimenti.
>
> Buona giornata,
> G.
>
> On Wed, 22 Jan 2025 at 14:25, Alberto Cammozzo via nexa
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> > Trump’s AI policy moves on his first two days in office and remarks at
> the White House on Tuesday showed him positioning himself as a strong
> supporter of the U.S. tech industry — while turning away from the Biden
> administration’s stance that AI technology requires both support and
> oversight. Biden’s executive order, some of which has been implemented by
> changes at federal agencies, focused on preventing risks such as algorithms
> that spread bias or AI assistants that could help terrorists build
> bioweapons.
> >
> > “AI seems to be very hot,” Trump said at the White House on Tuesday. “It
> seems to be the thing that a lot of smart people are looking at very
> strongly.”
> >
> > Trump was joined by OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, Oracle Chairman Larry Ellison
> and SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son who announced “Stargate,” a joint venture
> that will seek to spend as much as $500 billion over the next four years to
> build as many as 20 new data centers to support AI projects.
> >
> > The warehouselike facilities, stuffed with thousands of powerful and
> electricity-guzzling computer chips, are essential to developing and
> running AI software like that behind ChatGPT. A boom in data center
> construction is straining the power grid in states across the United States
> as companies including Microsoft, Google, Amazon and Meta have spent
> billions of dollars on new facilities. But AI leaders such as Altman say
> many more of the facilities must be built for AI technology to keep
> advancing.
> >
> > “I think this will be the most important project of this era,” Altman
> said at the White House on Tuesday. “We wouldn’t be able to do this without
> you, Mr. President,” he said, turning to Trump. Son said that SoftBank
> decided to move ahead with the Stargate project because of Trump’s election
> victory.
> >
> > The $500 billion doesn’t include money from the federal government,
> according to a person familiar with the project who spoke on the condition
> of anonymity to describe plans that haven’t been made public. In addition
> to the companies creating Stargate, Dubai investment firm MGX, an investor
> in OpenAI, will contribute funding to the project. Microsoft and
> semiconductor manufacturers ARM and Nvidia will provide technology, OpenAI
> said in an announcement.
> >
> > Trump’s industry-friendly first moves on tech policy were not unexpected.
> >
> > OpenAI has been working on Stargate for months, and its CEO Altman had
> been pitching politicians on the idea of a major push to build up AI
> infrastructure a year ago.
> >
> > Prominent Silicon Valley executives and investors, including some who
> contributed to Trump’s reelection, had long railed against President Joe
> Biden’s executive order instituting guardrails for AI technology.
> >
> > Although certain industry leaders like Altman said some regulation was
> necessary, critics said the government would only get in the way of the
> technology’s development and prevent smaller, younger companies from being
> able to compete with more established ones. Months before the election,
> Trump allies were already drafting an executive order of their own that
> would review “unnecessary” regulations and launch “Manhattan Projects” to
> develop military technology.
> >
> > Despite Trump’s more industry-friendly approach to AI, his emerging
> policy is not a complete reversal of his predecessor’s. Biden in the final
> days of his administration directed federal agencies to speed up the
> development of AI data center projects on federal land.
> >
> > Trump said on Tuesday that he supported that policy. “That sounds to me
> like it’s something that I would like. I’d like to see federal lands opened
> up for data centers. I think they’re going to be very important,” he said.
> >
> > Netchoice, a lobbying group with members including Google, Meta and
> Amazon, welcomed Trump repeal of the Biden-era AI rules. “His orders
> rolling back regulations on U.S. energy production and ending Biden’s
> artificial intelligence (AI) red tape wishlist are critical for America’s
> global leadership in technological development,” Netchoice said in a post
> on X. Amazon founder Jeff Bezos owns The Washington Post.
> >
> > Proponents of AI regulation have argued that it is needed not only to
> ward off potential harms from the technology but also to support its
> economic development and adoption by providing people with confidence that
> AI is safe to use.
> >
> > “A politically-motivated repeal with no thoughtful replacement is
> self-defeating for our country and dangerous for our people and the world,”
> Alondra Nelson, a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress, a
> liberal think tank, who also worked on technology policy in the Biden
> administration, said in a statement. “This will leave the American public
> unprotected from the risks and harms of AI and, therefore, unable to take
> up the benefits it might bring.”
> >
> > Deborah Raji, a Mozilla fellow and AI researcher at the University of
> California at Berkeley, said that the repeal of Biden’s executive order, in
> combination with the Supreme Court curbing federal agencies’ power to set
> and institute regulations last year and Trump’s ambitions to empower
> business leaders, create a “Wild West era” for AI products. “They’re going
> to be empowered to build models and throw them everywhere, without a lot of
> regard to safety,” she said.
> >
> > AI companies have been spending huge amounts of money buying computer
> chips and building new data centers to house them. The surge in data center
> construction has also pushed up estimates for how much electricity the U.S.
> will need to generate to power them, leading to some coal power plants that
> had been slated to be closed to be kept online.
>
>
>
> --
>
> Marco A. Calamari <[email protected]>
>

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