What changing US AI policy means to S. Korea


Hopping in: Customers enter a Waymo driverless taxi at Union Square in San Francisco, California. The company, a subsidiary of Alphabet, the parent of Google, now provides 150,000 driverless taxi rides per week. - Reuters

DONALD TRUMP’s victory in the United States presidential election earlier this month, securing another four-year term as the leader of the world’s most powerful country, has sent shockwaves across the globe and through various sectors on a magnitude and scope not seen in many years.

Not only experts and scholars but also the general public, including small retail investors and office workers, have actively debated the changes Trump is likely to bring about when he takes office in two months and the effects of those changes on how we live, think and make decisions.

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Trump , AI , policy , South Korea

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