AI Review
AI governance is moving toward a security alliance, not a global parliament The United States holds the main model, compute, and cloud leverage Voluntary standards will matter only if they become enforceable The most si
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AI export controls protect U.S.
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Managed Interdependence is the realistic path for middle powers Local data centers do not equal sovereign AI Real sovereignty needs leverage, exits and supplier choice The clearest warning in the sovereign AI debate is not a
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EU trade de-risking should not be driven by import shares alone The real risk lies in concentrated, hard-to-replace inputs Europe needs selective resilience, not broad decoupling EU trade de-risking could fail in two c
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EU strategic autonomy depends on reducing critical bottlenecks, not cutting trade China-linked inputs matter most where Europe cannot switch suppliers quickly The answer is targeted de-risking, stockpiles and crisis planning
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Europe’s green transition depends on foreign-controlled supply chains Factories alone do not create industrial autonomy Selective de-risking is stronger than full decoupling In 2024, China supplied 98 per
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South Korea bears real costs from US AI export controls The AI memory boom has provided temporary compensation Submarine cooperation adds a major strategic return In 2025, South Korea shipped $130.8 billion worth of goods to Ch
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AI can make basic financial guidance cheaper and more personal Its advice often follows life-cycle theory but falls back on rough rules Public standards are needed before guidance becomes automated action
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AI productivity gains remain limited and uneven Entry-level hiring may weaken before mass layoffs appear Policy must protect workers as tasks are redistributed The most informative figure in the AI employment debate is not 5
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AI chip controls can buy time, not permanent dominance Chinese substitution limits their long-term power That time must build U.S. and allied capacity In 2024, U.S.
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US restrictions exposed the fragility of allied AI access Europe needs leverage through capital, chips and compute A formal access compact could balance security with continuity One order from Washington on 12 June 2026 cut all f
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AI answers are weakening the traffic bargain that once supported original reporting Licensing can compensate publishers, but it cannot guarantee reliable AI outputs A fair settlement requires transparency, attribution, collective bargaining and funded verification
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The US–China AI split is becoming structural The Global South must secure access without accepting permanent dependence Cheaper AI matters only when it builds local capacity and bargaining power The global AI divide is ofte
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AI access does not guarantee real learning Teacher AI literacy determines whether AI supports or replaces thought Schools need stronger training, clearer rules and better assessment An AI tutor raised high school students’ mat
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AI adoption measures use, but not control. Europe’s deeper weakness lies in foreign-owned compute, cloud and energy infrastructure AI compute sovereignty requires shared capacity, open access and democratic oversight About three-
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Time-to-power now shapes the economics of AI infrastructure Faster deployment can strengthen innovation but also shift grid costs to the public Governments need coordinated, transparent rules that reward speed without weakening fairness or reliability.
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AI leadership depends on power, chips and secure infrastructure A democratic compute coalition could align faster delivery with allied cooperation Success depends on resilience, access and wider business adoption About 415 ter
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AI cognitive stunting is a governance problem, not a student failure Schools must sequence AI use so learning comes before automation Clear rules and better assessment can prevent AI from widening learning gaps Ninety-five p
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AI exposure follows work and capacity, not party identity The divide is between places that gain from AI and places that absorb its shocks Policy should focus on tasks, infrastructure and local power, not red-blue maps The c
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The AI adoption gap is an institutional gap, not just a tool gap The U.S.
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