The policy blueprint also recommends that the U.S. support energy infrastructure projects, make it easier to bring nuclear reactors back online, and tap the U.S. Navy to help expand nuclear energy capacity to meet the energy needs of AI. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has previously stated that a lack of computing capacity is hindering the company's product rollouts. The company is also planning to bring together global investors to spend billions on AI infrastructure in the U.S., including data centers, turbines, generators, and semiconductor manufacturing.
Key takeaways:
- OpenAI has proposed that the United States and its allies collaborate on artificial intelligence (AI) to compete with China's efforts in the AI field.
- The proposed AI collaboration would begin with the U.S. and its neighboring countries and then expand to include U.S. allies worldwide, focusing on talent, financing, and supply chains needed for AI.
- OpenAI's policy blueprint suggests that the U.S. support energy infrastructure projects, make it easier to bring nuclear reactors back online, and tap the U.S. Navy to help expand nuclear energy capacity to meet the energy needs of AI.
- OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has previously stated that a lack of computing capacity is hindering the company's product rollouts and that reducing the scarcity of AI chips used to train large language models could require between $5 trillion and $7 trillion.