Did you know What’s OpenAI’s Economic Blueprint? A Bold Call to Reshape AI, Policy, and Global Innovation
OpenAI is going full force to make a lasting impact in 2025 as it just shared a new document titled: OpenAI's Economic Blueprint.
The
company says the document entails all the policies that the firm feels
it can develop and work on with the US government and other associated
allies. This includes calls for America to attract investments worth
billions in sectors like data, talent, chips, and energy that can
achieve massive gains in AI.
So many countries are sidelining AI
and the potential it encases for great economic growth and stability,
the company’s VP shared. This is why it’s calling on lawmakers in the US
to take greater action for more support to develop the technology.
The
federal government at this moment in time has mostly left regulations
linked to AI to individual states which OpenAI does not feel is the
right solution. Last year alone, lawmakers rolled out nearly 700 bills
linked to AI that could conflict with so many others. This might lead to
developers of these open-sourced models with a lot of liability
requirements.
He further shared how much he agreed with the new president-elect on how difficult it is now to build certain things. Further discussions were about fueling data centers to not only create AI but also to run them. This is why the blueprint sends recommendations to increase budgets for data and power transmissions. This also means paving the way for sustainable energy sources like wind, nuclear, and solar.
OpenAI
already showed great support for nuclear power as it felt it needed the
energy to power server farms for future generations.
Furthermore,
the blueprint sheds light on the need for the government to devise new
policies for deploying models and preventing their misuse. This
streamlines the AI industry’s engagement with national security firms.
It also gives rise to more controls that start sharing models with
allies while restricting exports to adversary countries.
More
suggestions outlined in the document include sharing any threats linked
to the AI industry with stakeholders like vendors to secure the right
resources to determine risks. As per the approach taken by the federal
government in this regard, they want responsible exporting behavior.
This can assist them in standing up and developing their own ecosystems.
The
company already counts several American government departments as
leading partners but it hopes to add more to the list. So far, the
makers of ChatGPT are dealing with the Pentagon and defense startup firm
Anduril to supply AI tech to American military systems to defend
against drone attacks.