Svmuu News: As the value of the artificial intelligence industry grows rapidly, U.S. policymakers and the tech community have begun discussing how to ensure the public shares in the immense wealth generated by AI. A series of proposals all point in the same direction: having the government or public institutions hold equity stakes in AI companies.
Recently, Sam Altman discussed the possibility of the U.S. government or other public entities acquiring a partial stake in OpenAI. Meanwhile, the U.S. government already holds approximately 10% of Intel’s shares and has indicated it may receive a share of the revenue from NVIDIA’s chip sales to China.
U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders has proposed that major AI labs contribute half of their shares to a new sovereign wealth fund, allowing the public to share in the growth dividends of the AI industry.
Some observers argue that these proposals essentially aim to return a portion of the economic benefits of AI development to society, but critics point out that most current proposals ultimately boil down to a single model: government ownership of equity in AI companies.
Supporters believe that AI could become the most significant productivity transformation in the coming decades, and that government participation in profit distribution could alleviate the problem of wealth concentration; Opponents, however, worry that direct government ownership of stakes in technology companies could undermine market competition, corporate governance, and the drive for innovation.
As the valuation of the AI industry continues to rise, how to distribute the economic benefits generated by artificial intelligence is becoming a central issue of debate among U.S. policymakers and the tech industry. (The Information)