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“I am a former diplomat so I always think that there needs to be some baseline relationship, especially between the two most powerful countries in the world. And I do have a lot of concerns about the use of AI and what comes next. So if there’s any space for that type of dialogue, I am not opposed to it but I would have to get a sense of what further is detailed about this.”
Sen. James Lankford, R-Okla., said he supports the administration’s approach:
“We need to have some dialogue there to be able to talk about what are going to be the parameters, just so there is some kind of international agreement. Obviously the United States and China are the two innovators there. They’re going to have threats on their culture, if I can say it that way, just the same as we would on ours.”
Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., cautioned against such a channel, doubting Beijing’s trustworthiness:
“There’s always the possibility but I don’t see the path right now. I think we’re more competing than cooperating and I’m not sure that China is a trustworthy partner. I think there’s the likelihood that it would involve intellectual property theft. So I’d be very wary of it.”
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