Vietnam.vn - Nền tảng quảng bá Việt Nam

Many tech giants are wary of President Trump's new AI decree

(Dan Tri) - President Donald Trump has just signed a series of executive orders on artificial intelligence (AI), including a controversial directive.

Báo Dân tríBáo Dân trí25/07/2025

Nhiều gã khổng lồ công nghệ e dè trước sắc lệnh AI mới từ Tổng thống Trump - 1

President Donald Trump issued an executive order on AI on July 23 (Photo: Nikhinson).

The move is creating a new legal hurdle for tech companies looking to sell AI products to governments , forcing them to prove that their chatbots are not “influenced” by social ideologies.

Meanwhile, President Trump's AI plan is said to be aimed at countering China's AI dominance and reinforcing American values by requiring leading AI providers like Google (with its Gemini chatbot) or Microsoft (with Copilot) to disclose the internal policies guiding their chatbots, and self-censor to maintain government contracts.

"Woke" AI or Discriminatory AI?

The White House executive order targets efforts by tech companies to incorporate concepts like critical race theory, sexism, unconscious bias, intersectionality and systemic racism into AI models.

Modeling the behavior of large language models (LLMs) is a major challenge.

LLMs are trained on massive amounts of data from the Internet, reflecting all the biases and contradictions in human language.

“This is going to be incredibly difficult for tech companies to comply with,” said Jim Secreto, a former Biden administration official. “Large language models reflect the data they’re trained on, including all the inconsistencies and biases in human language.”

Soft censorship or hard control?

President Trump's executive order targeting AI companies demonstrates the neutrality between ideology and technology.

“The presidential administration is taking a softer but still coercive approach by using federal contracts as leverage. This creates intense pressure on companies to self-censor to stay in the good graces of the government and maintain cash flow,” Secreto explained.

However, Neil Chilson, a former senior technology expert at the Republican Federal Trade Commission, said the order was "fairly mild" and not difficult to comply with.

He stressed that President Trump's executive order does not require tech companies to ban specific AI content, but only requires developers not to intentionally encode partisan or ideological judgments.

Response from tech giants

So far, big tech companies have remained cautious.

OpenAI said it is awaiting more detailed guidance but believes ChatGPT's efforts to achieve its goals have put the technology in line with the order's requirements.

Microsoft, a key provider of services to the federal government, declined to comment.

Elon Musk's xAI issued a statement praising President Trump's AI announcement as a "positive step forward," but did not answer a question about how Grok would be affected.

Anthropic, Google, Meta and Palantir did not respond to requests for comment.

Source: https://dantri.com.vn/cong-nghe/nhieu-ga-khong-lo-cong-nghe-e-de-truoc-sac-lenh-ai-moi-tu-tong-thong-trump-20250725141514719.htm


Comment (0)

No data
No data
Admire the million-year-old Chu Dang Ya volcano in Gia Lai
It took Vo Ha Tram 6 weeks to complete the music project praising the Fatherland.
Hanoi coffee shop is bright with red flags and yellow stars to celebrate the 80th anniversary of National Day September 2nd
Wings flying on the A80 training ground
Special pilots in the flying formation to celebrate National Day September 2
Soldiers march through the hot sun on the training ground
Watch helicopters rehearse in the sky of Hanoi in preparation for National Day September 2
U23 Vietnam radiantly brought home the Southeast Asian U23 Championship trophy
Northern islands are like 'rough gems', cheap seafood, 10 minutes by boat from the mainland
The powerful formation of 5 SU-30MK2 fighters prepares for the A80 ceremony

Heritage

Figure

Business

No videos available

News

Political System

Local

Product