I progressi dell’intelligenza artificiale in Europa sono “insufficienti” per competere con Stati Uniti e Cina, afferma il rapporto francese

    https://www.euronews.com/next/2024/12/10/europes-ai-progress-insufficient-to-compete-with-us-and-china-french-report-says

    di AlbatrossHummingbird

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    18 commenti

    1. Eastern_Interest_908 on

      The fuck you want? EU should just pull out high tech company that can compete with google and microsoft out of their ass? 

    2. SinisterCheese on

      Well yeah. The only places with electricity cheap enough to run these operations are the places where the big players US are already establishing datacentres; The Nordic countries. Google just bought a big plot of land to next to river and a dam for a datacentre. And they have had Hamina for a good while, next to the sea with generous cooling supply.

      Also in EU we have these silly things like consumer rights and right to privacy, which prevents everything from being harvested from the people so someone can profit off it – usually in some form that is actively damaging to society.

    3. PutNo3922 on

      Lower taxes, reduce bureaucracy, and the EU *might* become competitive.

    4. MiataMX5NC on

      Surprise, outlawing any and all entrepreneurs from society and despising innovation/technology will lead to us not developing technology

      How are we supposed to compete if we literally hate those who make something?

    5. EchoZealousideal8124 on

      Europe: ‘It’s not a race.’
      US and China: ‘It literally is.’

    6. In my opinion, this is one of those few cases where the fact that we are not the first is more of an advantage than a disadvantage. Not every tomato is good

    7. Well, just put more regulations in place, that must do the trick.

    8. “Two-thirds of computer chips in the US, for instance, come from Taiwan, it said.”

      This seems to be written by someone that has missed the last 20 years of where computers are made, by whom, and who’s making big data centers.

      And for very, very specific values of “AI”.

    9. go_go_tindero on

      The degrowth mindset has become too baked into the bureaucracy in Europe. Stagnation and decline is a policy choice, and one that far too many Europeans are ok with.

    10. Any-Ant-4394 on

      a report probably produced by a tech company trying to sell you bullshit AI

    11. boomeronkelralf on

      Strong regulation, high taxes, inefficient subsidies, limited funding and no capital market union – wonder what the issue is lol

    12. Disallowed_username on

      _We have created all the necessary laws and regulations.  What’s the damn hold up, techies?!?_

    13. Why are all the comments acting like this is a bad thing? All those hustlers can run their pointless Ponzi schemes into the ground elsewhere.

    14. SnooOpinions1643 on

      In 2024, the US invested approximately $100 billion in AI, compared to Europe’s $2 billion. This 50:1 ratio in funding impacts R&D capabilities, talent acquisition, and startup scalability. For Europe to match the US investment levels, it would need to allocate an 4800% more annually, a substantial increase requiring both public and private sector contributions.

      Also, Europe’s stringent AI regulations, aimed at ensuring ethical and secure AI development, inadvertently slow innovation. Compliance costs for companies are higher, reducing their global competitiveness. To quantify, if regulatory compliance raises operational costs by 20%, European firms would need to offset these costs either through efficiency gains or higher revenues, which is challenging in a fragmented market.

      Additionally, the US benefits from Silicon Valley’s dense network of tech companies, investors, and academic institutions, which fosters rapid innovation and commercialization. Europe’s tech hubs are more dispersed, reducing network effects and collaboration opportunities. For Europe to replicate Silicon Valley’s success, it would require concentrated investment in key regions, potentially aiming to double the current density of tech firms and research institutions in areas like Berlin, Paris, and Amsterdam.

      Europe will never win or even match the US and (especially) China when it comes to the big tech sector.

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