
Noah Feldman Greene
Articles
-
Nov 26, 2024 |
cnas.org | Rachel Ziemba |Janet Egan |Michael Depp |Noah Feldman Greene
In September 2024, the French government, in collaboration with civil society partners, invitedtechnical and policy experts to share their opinions on emerging technology issues relevant to the agenda of the 2025 AI Action Summit in Paris. The AI Action Summit is the third iteration of the AI Safety Summit, following the inaugural meeting hosted by the United Kingdom in 2023, which resulted in the Bletchley Declaration. The South Korean government hosted the second gathering in Seoul in 2024.
-
May 23, 2024 |
cnas.org | Noah Feldman Greene |Lisa Louis
Noah Greene from the AI Safety and Stability Project at Washington-based think tank Center for a New American Security (CNAS) says the French government "flipped a switch" when it decided to become an AI champion. But making that ambition a reality might be an uphill struggle, he told DW. With the United States being the clear AI market leader, and China coming second ahead of the UK, the backlog of EU leaders France and Germany was not only down to technological factors, he said.
-
Apr 2, 2024 |
techpolicy.press | Noah Feldman Greene
French President Emmanuel Macron is marching ahead with his plan to make France the artificial intelligence (AI) powerhouse of continental Europe. Last year, Macron announced €500 million in new funding to boost the country’s AI development. This, combined with France’s hesitancy to further regulate certain foundation models during the European Union’s AI Act negotiations, is part of the country’s strategy to become an AI leader.
-
Mar 5, 2024 |
cnas.org | Vivek Chilukuri |Paul Scharre |Noah Feldman Greene
As the world grapples with how to regulate artificial intelligence, Washington faces a unique dilemma: how to secure America’s position as the global AI leader, while guarding against AI’s possible risks? Although any country seeking to regulate AI must balance regulation and innovation, this task is especially hard for the United States because we have more to lose.
-
Feb 29, 2024 |
cnas.org | Paul Scharre |Noah Feldman Greene |Vivek Chilukuri
Recent developments point to a troubling reality: China is increasingly embracing cyberattacks as a geopolitical weapon. Last month, Japanese officials disclosed that Chinese hackers had intercepted confidential diplomatic cables through cyberattacks on the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Ahead of Taiwan's election the previous month, the island experienced a huge surge in Chinese cyberattacks.
Try JournoFinder For Free
Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.
Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →