July 19, 2017

The Rocky Relationship Between Washington & Silicon Valley

Clearing the Path to Improved Collaboration

The Trump administration inherited a decent foundation on which to build collaborative ties between Washington and hubs of American innovation like Silicon Valley. Both President Barack Obama and former Secretary of Defense Ash Carter invested heavily in improving government outreach to the tech industry, bringing Washington and Silicon Valley closer than they have been in decades on both policy substance and technology solutions in the national security space. But the relationship was far from perfect, and it is as yet unclear whether lessons, good and bad, from Obama’s efforts have been taken seriously by their successors. 

Serious work remains to be done in substantive collaborations on countering violent extremism, the future of encryption, cybersecurity threats, and surveillance. Furthermore, several minefields lay ahead – such as addressing the technical and foreign policy challenges of “fake news,” the ongoing immigration debate, and the impact of automation on both domestic and international security matters. At this stage, it is unclear whether there will be similar levels of engagement with the tech industry to collaborate on solutions to these challenges or if the relationship will be sustained.

To read more, please visit Copia.is.

  • Podcast
    • October 17, 2024
    U.S. Chip Controls and the Future of AI Compute

    That escalated quickly! Emily and Geoff discuss why the U.S. aim to deny China access to the computing power necessary for frontier AI capabilities has led to an ever expandin...

    By Emily Kilcrease, Geoffrey Gertz & Pablo Chavez

  • Podcast
    • October 11, 2024
    Asymmetry and AI: The Battle for Power

    Paul Scharre, Vice President and Director of Studies at CNAS, joins Zero Pressure to discuss the world of asymmetric warfare, a term used to describe imbalances in conflict. F...

    By Paul Scharre

  • Commentary
    • Just Security
    • September 19, 2024
    Competition, Not Control, is Key to Winning the Global AI Race

    The United States, with much of the world’s AI-enabling infrastructure, has positioned itself as the global leader in AI innovation. That might not be the case for much longer...

    By Keegan McBride & Matthew Mittelsteadt

  • Commentary
    • Time
    • September 16, 2024
    Regulating AI Is Easier Than You Think

    Countries can regulate AI from the ground up by controlling access to highly specialized chips...

    By Paul Scharre

View All Reports View All Articles & Multimedia