Trump’s AI Action Plan: US President signed executive orders; Wants to make America a leader in the Artificial Intelligence Race

US President Donald Trump on Wednesday signed three comprehensive executive orders with the aim of re -shaping the US artificial intelligence landscape, especially the White House described as the “Woque” AI model. Orders are part of Trump’s comprehensive campaign, the variety comes against initiatives as he pledges to create the US to create a “AI export powerhouse”.Speaking at an AI summit in Washington, he said that the world is now, whether we like it or not, in an intense race to develop and shape a revolutionary technology, in an intense race, a one who will play a defined role in the future of civilization, thanks to the talent and creativity coming from Silicon Valley.“America is the country that launched the AI race and as the President of the United States, I am here today to declare that America is going to win it.”“We are going to work hard. We are going to win it,” said Trump.He said that America will not allow any other nation to defeat it and “Children will now be on a planet controlled by algorithms”. Executive orders include, the so -called “Woque” Acracadown on AI, to streamlinom federal permits for datascentra infrastructure and to promote American AI exports.These tasks were unveiled with the 24-Page “AI Action Plan”, titled The Tighting The Race, which underlines the administration’s roadmap to adopt AI in federal agencies and strengthen the US leadership in the region. The document replaces the executive order of a previous biden-era that introduced regulatory standards and safety measures for AI according to the guardian. Trump said, “Winning this competition would be tested by our abilities unlike anything since the morning of the space age,” Trump said, urged American technology companies to “put America first”.However, what matters as a political bias in AI is still not clear and debated, which has caused concern that the government can use these new powers to go incorrectly after some companies.Trump also suggested to re -write the name of technology. He said, “I don’t like the name, you know? I don’t like anything that is artificial. So we can straighten it, please? We should change the name. I really mean,” he said. “It is not artificial. It is talented.”At the summit, he announced, “American people do not want the AI model to awaken Marxist Lucy, nor to do other countries.” A second executive order focuses on abolishing AI development and accelerating the creation of a datasentress, often large-scale, resource-intensive features that power the AI models. The Guardian reported that this includes environmental protection that can disrupt such projects. While datacentres are essential for hosting AI infrastructure, they consume large amounts of energy and water and are the major contributors in greenhouse gas emissions. Environmental groups have raised an alarm on rising air and noise pollution, and some communities have opposed the expansion of these features in their neighborhoods. Despite this, Trump’s order supports long -standing demands from technical firms to allow law allowing law and energy infrastructure. It also frames AI development as a case of geopolitical urgency, indicating China’s huge investment in AI chips and datasants. Companies like Dipsek have emerged as a malignant challenge for the dominance of Silicon Valley. The administration’s aggressive conceptual tension against “Woque” AI reflects. The conservatives have converted their criticism to a generic AI tool from social media moderation, accusing them of suppressing the right -wing approach.Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang also appreciated the order citing benefits as the President of Donald Trump. “The unique advantage of America that may not be President Trump in any other country,” Television Host Ed Ludlo said Huang. The tweet was later shared by the US President.