It’s a rallying cry that every government can get behind. As artificial intelligence seeps into more facets of society — including critical industries like defense, healthcare and financial services — countries want more control over the underlying technology.
There is also a fear that embedded values in the training data of foreign AI models can now spread at scale. This risks erasing cultural and linguistic nuances at a time when these tools are increasingly relied on by everyday citizens for search, drafting emails or completing homework assignments. These sensitivities are especially prominent across Asia, where even the names of major bodies of ...
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