@Dan_Jeffries1: The most revealing thing about this AI leadership paper is that it reads less like a vision for innovation and more lik…
Summary
The thread critiques AI leadership for centralizing control under safety rhetoric, drawing parallels to 1990s encryption export restrictions. It argues that sanctions against China have accelerated its domestic chip and AI development, potentially leading to geopolitical escalation and fragmentation of the global software ecosystem.
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The most revealing thing about this AI leadership paper is that it reads less like a vision for innovation and more like a glossy whitepaper for a 21st century East India Company.
Every generation of incumbents discovers a new moral vocabulary for why they alone should control transformative technology.
In the 90s it was cryptography. We were told strong encryption was too dangerous to spread because terrorists, rogue states, chaos, dual-use, etc. So the US crippled exports, weakened products, slowed adoption, and kneecapped parts of its own software industry. Right up until reality steamrolled the policy and we woke up to its stupidity and then eCommerce, secure communications, software signing, and the modern internet exploded and gave us tremendous benefits.
Now the exact same priesthood has returned with AI.
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“Dual-use.”
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“Strategic advantage.”
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“Model distillation.”
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“National security.”
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“Responsible access.” A few different nouns but mostly the same ones. Same instinct:
Centralize control, gatekeep compute, fuse state and corporate power, and call it safety.
The funniest part is that this strategy is almost perfectly designed to accelerate the thing they claim to fear.
You do not stop a rival superpower (who happens to be the absolute best at scaling energy and manufacturing and who has a choke-hold on rare Earths refinement) from building domestic capability by permanently attempting to strangle them.
You create the economic and political incentive for total self-sufficiency.
We have already done that as Jensen warned. We went from 100% market to nearly 0%. Huawei is now manufacturing millions of chips. DeepSeek v4 trained on them. They have more energy than the rest of the world combined. Meanwhile, we have activists and anti-economic fools like AOC and Bernie pushing for data center moratoriums and we can’t build a single bullet train in 20 years and folks fighting to not expand the energy grid here and new nuclear plants getting tied up in environmental regulation for a decade.
The sanctions did the exact opposite of what the hawks wanted. They jumpstarted a moribund, dinosaur of a Chinese chips industry. We basically said to the people who happen control the most powerful manufacturing engine on the planet “we intend to squeeze you.”
They rightly saw it as an existential threat.
The sanctions become the industrial policy.
Huawei. SMIC. Domestic lithography. Packaging. Memory. Entire Chinese supply chains that did not exist at serious scale a decade ago now exist precisely because Washington convinced Beijing they had no choice.
Brilliant work.
So the endgame here is what exactly?
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Push China into a Manhattan Project for chips and AI.
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Increase the strategic value of Taiwan even further.
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Once China reaches self sufficiency that can invade Taiwan and choke off our own super advanced chips where are made there exclusively (and no we don’t have even close to enough TSMC factories in Arizona or anywhere else in the world).
That’s every NVIDIA chip. Every Google tensor chip. Every Apple chip. Every chip in you iPhone and Android phone. Every Amazon chip. The chips in your car and truck and hair dryer and washing machine.
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Escalate a cold tech war into a permanent civilizational bloc conflict that is likely to turn into a shooting war at one point.
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Fragment the global software ecosystem.
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Create American AI aristocracies protected by regulation and compute licensing.
And somehow call this “open innovation.”
Meanwhile the actual history of software keeps screaming the opposite lesson:
Knowledge diffuses, open ecosystems win, developers route around gatekeepers, and attempts to permanently contain computation usually fail.
What really jumps off the page is the assumption that a tiny cluster of frontier labs should become quasi-sovereign actors, deciding who gets intelligence, who gets compute, who gets models, and which countries are permitted to participate in the future.
Not elected governments.
Not open markets.
Not open-source communities.
A handful of corporations sitting beside the national security state, insisting that concentration of power is necessary to protect democracy.
You almost have to admire the audacity.
You’ve described yet another major pain point that results from having no real General Theory of Intelligent Systems @Dan_Jeffries1 The mistaken belief that centralized “models” represent operational Intelligence is flat out wrong. In every example of an Intelligent System, it
You’ve described yet another major pain point that results from having no real General Theory of Intelligent Systems @Dan_Jeffries1 The mistaken belief that centralized “models” represent operational Intelligence is flat out wrong. In every example of an Intelligent System, it is the complex interactions of many Nodes which produces its Intelligence. NOT the processing power of a centralized, monolithic “brain”. We impose the false anthropomorphist concept of Intelligence as the property of discrete human brains and we get techno totalitarianism in place of anthro totalitarianism. Any individual human is as intelligent as they are today due to 100k years of human cultural evolution…trillions of interactions over thousands of years that accumulated into the Intelligent System of Humanity. Not getting this basic and, frankly obvious fact could be our ultimate downfall.
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