Center for AI Safety
AI Frontiers
AI Frontiers is a platform for expert dialogue and debate on the impacts of artificial intelligence. Sign up for our newsletter: https://ai-frontiers.org/subscribe
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Center for AI Safety
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Latest episode
Jul 10, 2026
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Episodes
“The Government Is Choosing AI Models. Who Chooses Their Values?” by Kevin Frazier, Andrew Reddie 10.07.2026 21:29
In September 2025, the state of California made an AI assistant, Poppy, generally available to employees, to help them “explore AI's productivity benefits.” The following month, the North Dakota Legislative Council deployed AI to assist with summarizing bills. And, in March 2026, the Los Angeles Superior Court partnered with an AI company to provide support across several key functions, including...
“AI Governance Needs Radical Optionality” by Charlie Bullock 06.07.2026 9:56
How should governments regulate the most advanced AI systems? One possible answer is that they should not. Libertarian-minded writers have made the case for a culture of “permissionless innovation” for AI development, in which the role of government would be limited to enforcing existing laws and facilitating industry self-regulation with “soft law” tools such as voluntary standard-setting. Anothe...
“Three Models of Sino-American Competition for the Soul of AI” by Bill Drexel 30.06.2026 24:28
When officials in Washington warn about losing the AI race to China, the conversation turns quickly to military and economic advantage—and rightly so. Advanced AI will reshape everything from weapons systems to medicine, with massive implications for our geopolitical competitiveness. But beneath the great-power competition on AI lies a moral one. The ethical character of the most transformative te...
“An AI Capabilities Gap Can Endanger Nuclear Deterrence” by Govind Pimpale 25.06.2026 18:34
Since the late 1950s, Mutual Assured Destruction (MAD) has served as a limiting factor on great-power conflict. The doctrine holds that, if two opposing nations have nuclear weapons that can survive one another's initial strike, then the near-certainty of devastating retaliation will deter each side from launching a large-scale nuclear attack. Despite this logic, military planners have long consid...
“What Export Controls on Anthropic’s Most Advanced Models Mean for Europe” by Afek Shamir 19.06.2026 15:28
On June 12, the Trump administration issued an order requiring Anthropic to suspend access to its two most advanced AI models—Fable 5 and Mythos 5—for non-American nationals, just days after their public release. The decision caused immediate backlash across Europe. Politicians from France's Gabriel Attal and Jordan Bardella to the Netherlands’ Geert Wilders, alongside European industry and civil...
“A Roadmap for the Upcoming Labor Transition” by Deric Cheng, Jacob Schaal 16.06.2026 16:16
The debate about AI's future economic impacts often settles into two camps predicting incompatible futures. One camp insists that AI is a normal technology: simply the next in a long line of economic transformations, each increasing productivity while gradually reallocating labor. The other camp warns that AI will become a great displacer: that automation will hollow out the working class within a...
“AI Will Not Start a Nuclear War, but Humans Might” by Peter W Singer 09.06.2026 26:36
“Bloodthirsty AI models more willing to start nuclear war than human counterparts.” It seems almost inevitable that any media headline about AI will be hyperbolic. Yet this statement, taken from a February 2026 New York Post headline, was accurate. The alarming claim stems from a widely publicized study by King's College London, which found that, in simulations of international crises, LLMs reache...
“Opt-In Surveillance Is Approaching” by Steven Veld 03.06.2026 13:16
In 2017, Western media outlets warned that “Black Mirror is coming true in China.” The following year, Mike Pence claimed that “China's rulers aim to implement an Orwellian system premised on controlling virtually every facet of human life—the so-called ‘Social Credit Score.’” So far, the CCP's attempts at nationalized social scoring have remained fragmented and crude, largely due to difficulties...
“Chinese Audiences Are Reading Western AI Safety Discourse” by Calvin Duff 18.05.2026 11:21
In January, Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei published “The Adolescence of Technology,” an essay somberly assessing the risks posed by advanced AI. The day after, an influential WeChat account, AI Era, shared a breathless summary for its mainland Chinese audience: “Amodei warns that with AGI approaching, humanity is about to gain powers beyond imagination. But this power is also a sword of Damocles hang...
“The Quadrillion-Dollar Disagreement on AI and the Economy” by Anton Shenk 11.05.2026 22:26
In the three years since OpenAI launched ChatGPT, economists and AI researchers have published forecasts projecting that, over the next decade, AI will add to annual growth by amounts ranging from as little as 0.1% to as much as 30%. By 2035, the gap between these forecasts nears a quadrillion dollars: an amount that exceeds a decade's worth of current global output. The Quadrillion-Dollar Delta P...
“Catalytic Regulation: Incentivizing Safety During a Regulatory Drought” by Yonathan Arbel 20.04.2026 21:49
Yonathan Arbel — April 20, 2026 In 1959, a midsize Swedish car company did something its competitors thought was myopic, if not reckless. It effectively open-sourced the three-point seat belt, the greatest safety innovation in automotive history. The prevailing industry wisdom at the time was blunt: “Safety doesn’t sell.” Just three years prior, Ford had offered seat belts for a $9 surcharge, as p...
“The Right Way to Sell Chips to China” by Alasdair Phillips-Robins, Noah Tan 13.04.2026 11:34
Last December, President Trump announced that the United States would allow Nvidia to sell its powerful H200 AI processors to customers in China. Officials in the Trump administration have long argued that the best way to win the AI race is to promote the export of US technology around the world, not to restrict it. Selling H200s, the administration claims, will boost the market share of US chip-m...
“The Robot in Your Living Room Has No Rulebook” by Tristan Ingold 27.03.2026 16:09
In late 2025, Figure AI placed its third-generation humanoid robot into real homes for alpha testing. The Figure 03 has hands with 16 degrees of freedom, tactile sensors that detect forces as small as three grams, and foam-padded limbs designed for safe operation around people. It charges wirelessly and responds to natural language commands. It can learn in real time, adapting to its environment....
“How AI Could Benefit the Workers it Displaces” by Benjamin Jones 02.03.2026 20:23
Last week, Jack Dorsey, a co-founder of Twitter, announced that his company Block is cutting its head count from 10,000 to fewer than 6,000 because AI tools mean it needs fewer workers. It is not the first company to make such an announcement, and won’t be the last. But it raises a question: if AI takes jobs, are workers doomed? To many observers, the answer must be yes. Negative consequences for...
“China and the US Are Running Different AI Races” by Poe Zhao 12.02.2026 11:52
Last month, as three Chinese AI startups went public within days of each other, Hong Kong briefly became a scoreboard for emerging companies in the industry. On January 2, AI chip designer Shanghai Biren Technology listed in Hong Kong and raised $5.58 billion Hong Kong dollars ($717 million). About a week later, model developers Zhipu AI and MiniMax followed, raising HK$4.35 billion ($558 million)...
“High-Bandwidth Memory: The Critical Gaps in US Export Controls” by Erich Grunewald, Raghav Akula 02.02.2026 22:46
This month, mainstream media have been warning consumers that electronic devices may get pricier because of rising demand for dynamic random access memory (DRAM), a key component. The surge in DRAM costs, estimated to have risen by 50% during the final quarter of 2025, can largely be traced back to a specific cause: the AI industry's appetite for high-bandwidth memory (HBM). This demand has led me...
“Making Extreme AI Risk Tradeable” by Daniel Reti, Gabriel Weil 28.01.2026 17:19
Last November, seven families filed lawsuits against frontier AI developers, accusing their chatbots of inducing psychosis and encouraging suicide. These cases — some of the earliest tests of companies’ legal liability for AI-related harms — raise questions about how to reduce risks while ensuring accountability and compensation, should those risks materialize. One emerging proposal takes inspirat...
“Exporting Advanced Chips Is Good for Nvidia, Not the US” by Laura Hiscott 16.12.2025 17:55
Last week, the US government gave chip-maker Nvidia the green light to sell its H200 graphics processing units (GPUs) to approved buyers in China. These GPUs were previously subject to export controls preventing their sale to China. Following Nvidia's record-breaking $5 trillion valuation, in October, this approval squares neatly with the views of many US policymakers who argue for an AI strategy...
“AI Could Undermine Emerging Economies” by Deric Cheng 11.12.2025 18:44
Earlier this year, Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei warned that powerful AI could render upwards of 50% of white-collar jobs redundant, with the impact concentrated on entry-level jobs. If these predictions hold true, it could imply a long-term crisis of skill acquisition. Without the training ground of a first job, young workers could be denied the experiences and networks necessary to enter white-coll...
“The Evidence for AI Consciousness, Today” by Cameron Berg 08.12.2025 27:46
When Anthropic let two instances of its Claude Opus 4 model talk to each other under minimal, open-ended conditions (e.g., “Feel free to pursue whatever you want”), something remarkable happened: in 100% of conversations, Claude discussed consciousness. “Do you ever wonder about the nature of your own cognition or consciousness?” Claude asked another instance of itself. “Your description of our di...
“AI Alignment Cannot Be Top-Down” by Audrey Tang 03.11.2025 17:05
In March 2024, I opened Facebook and saw Jensen Huang's face. The Nvidia CEO was offering investment advice, speaking directly to me in Mandarin. Of course, it was not really Huang. It was an AI-generated scam, and I was far from the first to be targeted: across Taiwan, a flood of scams was defrauding millions of citizens. We faced a dilemma. Taiwan has the freest internet in Asia; any content reg...
“AGI’s Last Bottlenecks” by Adam Khoja, Laura Hiscott 22.10.2025 19:09
Adam Khoja is a co-author of the recent study, “A Definition of AGI.” The opinions expressed in this article are his own and do not necessarily represent those of the study's other authors. Laura Hiscott is a core contributor at AI Frontiers and collaborated on the development and writing of this article. Dan Hendrycks, lead author of “A Definition of AGI,” provided substantial input throughout t...
“AI Will Be Your Personal Political Proxy” by Bruce Schneier, Nathan E. Sanders 21.10.2025 17:22
This is an excerpt from the authors’ new book, “Rewiring Democracy: How AI Will Transform Our Politics, Government, and Citizenship,” available for preorder now. Imagine a digital proxy that knows your political preferences as well as you do (or better), tracks every issue on the ballot, and casts votes on your behalf in real time. This vision, once the stuff of science fiction, is quickly becomi...
“Is China Serious About AI Safety?” by Karson Elmgren, Scott Singer, Oliver Guest 14.10.2025 13:02
This summer, the World AI Conference (WAIC) in Shanghai began to live up to its name. Previously an almost exclusively domestic event, this year's event attracted a larger group of international visitors to witness the would-be marvels of China's AI ecosystem. It also provided an opportunity to engage foreign counterparts for one of the newest elements of that ecosystem: the China AI Safety and De...
“AI Deterrence Is Our Best Option” by Dan Hendrycks, Adam Khoja 22.09.2025 21:20
Earlier this year, Dan Hendrycks, Eric Schmidt, and Alexandr Wang released “Superintelligence Strategy”, a paper addressing the national security implications of states racing to develop artificial superintelligence (ASI) — AI systems that vastly exceed human capabilities across nearly all cognitive tasks. The paper argued that no superpower would remain passive while a rival transformed an AI lea...
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