Embracing the Age of AI Nationalism

Embracing the Age of AI Nationalism



Welcome to the era of AI nationalism

The hottest technology of 2023 had a busy last few weeks of the year. On November 28th Abu Dhabi⁣ launched a new state-backed artificial-intelligence firm, AI71, that ⁢will commercialise its leading⁢ “large ‍language model” ‌(LLM), Falcon. On December 11th Mistral, ‍a seven-month-old‍ French model-builder,⁤ announced a blockbuster $400m funding round, which ⁢insiders say will value the firm‍ at over $2bn. Four days⁢ later Krutrim, a new Indian startup, unveiled India’s first multilingual ‍LLM,⁣ barely a week after Sarvam, a five-month old one, raised ⁤$41m⁤ to build similar‍ Indian-language models.

Ever ⁤since OpenAI, an American firm, launched⁢ ChatGPT, its ​human-like conversationalist, in‍ November 2022, just about every month has brought ⁤a flurry of⁣ similar news. Against that backdrop, the three latest announcements might⁢ look​ unexceptional. Look closer,⁣ though, ⁢and they hint⁤ at something more profound.⁢ The three companies are, in their own distinct ways, vying to‌ become AI⁤ national champions. “We want ⁢AI71 to compete globally with the likes of OpenAI”, says Faisal al-Bannai of Abu Dhabi’s Advanced ⁣Technology Research Council,⁣ the state agency‌ behind ​the Emirati startup. “Bravo to Mistral, that’s French genius,” crowed⁢ Emmanuel Macron, the ⁣president ‌of France, ​recently.‌ ChatGPT and other English-first LLMs “cannot capture our culture,​ language‌ and ethos”, declared Krutrim’s founder, Bhavish⁣ Aggarwal. Sarvam started with Indian languages because, in the words of its co-founder, Vivek Raghavan, “We’re‌ building an ⁢Indian company.”

AI is already at the ⁤heart ‍of the intensifying technological contest between America and China.​ Over the⁢ past year they have pledged ⁣$40bn-50bn ​apiece for‌ AI investments. Other countries do not want to be left⁣ behind—or stuck‌ with a ⁤foreign critical technology over which ⁢they have little control. In​ the ⁤past year another⁢ six particularly AI-ambitious governments around the world—Britain,…

2024-01-01 12:46:44
Article​ from www.economist.com
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