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2024 m. sausio 7 d., sekmadienis

Welcome to the era of AI nationalism


"The hottest technology of 2023 had a busy last few weeks of the year. On November 28th Abu Dhabi launched a new state-backed artificial-intelligence company , AI71, that will commercialise its leading "large language model" (LLM), Falcon. On December 11th Mistral, a seven-month-old French AI startup, announced a blockbuster $400m funding round, which insiders say will value the firm at over $2bn. Four days later Krutrim, a new Indian startup, unveiled India's first multilingual LLM, barely a week after Sarvam, a five-month-old one, raised $41m to build similar Indian-language models.

Ever since OpenAI , an American firm, launched ChatGPT, its humanlike conversationalist, in November 2022, just about every month has brought a flurry of similar news. Against that backdrop, the four latest announcements might look unexceptional. Look closer, though, and they hint at something more profound. The three companies are, in their own distinct ways, vying to become AI national champions. "We want AI71 to compete globally with the likes of OpenAI," says Faisal al-Bannai of Abu Dhabi's Advanced Technology Research Council, the state agency behind the Emirati startup. "Bravo to Mistral, that's French genius," crowed Emmanuel Macron, the president of France, recently. ChatGPT and other English-first LLMs "cannot capture our culture, language and ethos", declared Krutrim's founder, Bhavish Aggarwal. Sarvam started with Indian languages because, in the words of its co-founder, Vivek Raghavan, "We're building an Indian company."

AI is already at the heart of the intensifying technological contest between America and China . In the past year their governments have pledged $40bn-50bn apiece for AI investments. Other countries do not want to be left behind—or stuck with a critical technology that is under foreign control. In 2023 another six particularly AI-ambitious governments around the world—Britain, France, Germany, India, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE)—promised to bankroll AI to the collective tune of around $40bn.

 Most of this will go towards purchases of graphics-processing units (GPUs, the type of chips used to train AI models) and factories to make such chips, as well as, to a lesser extent, support for AI firms.

 The nature and degree of state involvement varies from one wannabe AI superpower to another. It is early days, but the contours of new AI-industrial complexes are emerging.

Start with America, whose tech firms give everyone else AI envy. Its vibrant private sector is innovating furiously without direct support from Uncle Sam. Instead, the federal government is spending around $50bn over five years to increase domestic chipmaking capacity . The idea is to reduce America's reliance on Taiwanese semiconductor manufacturers such as TSMC, the world's biggest and most sophisticated such company. Supplies from Taiwan could, fear security hawks in Washington, be imperilled if China decided to invade the island , which it considers part of its territory.

Another way America intends to stay ahead of the pack is by nobbling rivals . President Joe Biden's administration has enacted brutal export controls that ban the sale of cutting-edge AI technology, including chips and chipmaking equipment, to adversaries such as China and Russia. It has also barred Americans from sharing their AI expertise with those countries.

It is now coercing those on the geopolitical fence to fall in line. In October the American government started requiring companies in third countries, including Saudi Arabia and the UAE, to secure a licence in order to buy AI chips from Nvidia, an American firm that sells most of them. The rules have a "presumption of approval". That means the government will "probably allow" sales to such firms, says Gregory Allen, who used to work on AI policy at the Department of Defence—as long, that is, as they do not have close ties to China. On December 6th Xiao Peng, who runs a state-backed AI startup in Abu Dhabi called G42, announced that the company would be cutting ties with Chinese hardware suppliers such as Huawei, a Chinese electronics company.

China's AI strategy is in large part a response to American techno-containment. According to data from JW Insights, a research firm, between 2021 and 2022 the Chinese state spent nearly $300bn to recreate the chip supply chain (for AI and other semiconductors) at home, where it would be immune from Western sanctions. A lot of that money is probably wasted. But it almost certainly helped Huawei and SMIC, China's biggest chipmaker, to design and manufacture a surprisingly sophisticated GPU last year.

The central and local authorities also channel capital into AI firms through state-backed "guidance funds", nearly 2,000 of which around the country invest in all manner of technologies deemed to be strategically important. The Communist Party is guiding private money, too, towards its technological priorities. Often it does so by cracking down on certain sectors—most recently, in December, video-gaming —while dropping heavy hints about which industries investors should be looking at instead. 

The government is also promoting data exchanges, where businesses can trade commercial data on everything from sales to production, allowing small firms with AI ambitions to compete where previously only large data-rich firms could. There are already 50 such exchanges in China.

Elements of this state-led approach are being emulated in other parts of the world, notably in the Gulf's petrostates. Being autocracies, Saudi Arabia and the UAE can move faster than democratic governments, which must heed voters' concerns about AI's impact on things like privacy and jobs. Being wealthy, they can afford both the GPUs (on which the two countries have together so far splurged several hundred million dollars) and the energy needed to run the power-hungry chips.

They can also plough money into developing human capital. Their richly endowed universities are quickly climbing up global rankings. The AI programme at King Abdullah University of Science and Technology in Saudi Arabia and the Mohamed bin Zayed University of Artificial Intelligence (MBZUAI) in Abu Dhabi, the world's first AI-focused school, have poached star professors from illustrious institutions such as the University of California, Berkeley, and Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh. Many of their students and researchers come from China. And plenty stick around. Nearly all of MBZUAI's graduates, who number a couple of hundred, stay in the region to work at local firms and labs, says its provost, Timothy Baldwin (himself lured to the Middle East from the University of Melbourne).

The Gulf approach is producing results. The capabilities of the Falcon model, first built by a team of 20 or so engineers, rival those of Llama 2, the most widely used "open-source" model, devised by Meta, an American tech giant. AI71 plans to improve its open-source models using national datasets from fields including health, education and, some day, perhaps oil. "In the last 50 years, oil drove the country…now data is the new oil," says Mr al-Bannai.

The alignment problem

A third group of governments is combining elements of America's approach with those of the Chinese and Emiratis. The EU has its version of America's incentives for domestic chipmaking. So do some member states: Germany is footing a third of the €30bn ($33bn) bill for a new chip factory to be built there by Intel, an American chipmaker. Outside the bloc, Britain has promised to funnel £1bn ($1.3bn) over five years to AI and supercomputing (albeit without going into detail about how exactly the money will be spent). India's government is promoting manufacturing, including of semiconductors, with generous "production-linked incentives", encouraging big cloud-computing providers to build more Indian data centres, where AI models are trained, and thinking about buying $1.2bn-worth of GPUs.

Like China and the Gulf but unlike America, where federal and state governments are reluctant to part with public data, India and some European countries are keen on making such data available to firms. France's government "has been very supportive" in that regard, says Arthur Mensch, Mistral's boss. Britain's is considering allowing firms to tap rich data belonging to the National Health Service. India's government has enormous amounts of data from its array of digital public services, known as the "India Stack". Insiders expect it eventually to integrate Indian AI models into those digital services.

In contrast to China, which regulates consumer-facing AI with a heavy hand, at least for the time being Britain, France, Germany and India favour light-touch rules for AI or, in India's case, none at all. The French and German governments have soured on the EU's AI Act , the final details of which are being hotly debated in Brussels—no doubt because it could constrain Mistral and Aleph Alpha, Germany's most successful model-builder, which raised €460m in November.

It is natural for countries to want some control over what may prove to be a transformational technology. Especially in sensitive and highly regulated sectors such as defence, banking or health care , many governments would rather not rely on imported AI. 

Yet each flavour of AI nationalism also carries risk.

America's beggar-thy-neighbour approach is likely to upset not just its adversaries but also some allies. China's heavy regulation may offset some of the potential gains from its heavy spending. Building models for local languages, as Krutrim and Sarvam in India plan to do, may prove futile if foreign models continue to improve their multilingual capabilities. The Gulf's bet on open-source models may misfire if other governments limit their use, as Mr Biden has hinted at in a recent executive order and the EU could do through its AI Act, out of fear that open LLMs could be put to malign uses by mischief-makers. Saudi and Emirati institutions may struggle to hold on to talent; a developer who worked on Falcon admits it greatly benefited from a partnership with a French team of engineers who have since been poached by Hugging Face, a high-flying Silicon Valley AI startup. As one sceptical investor notes, it is not yet clear how vast or useful public Emirati data actually is.

As Nathan Benaich of Air Street Capital, a venture-capital firm, sums it up, most efforts to create national models "are probably a waste of money". Mr Benaich's warning is unlikely to dissuade AI-curious governments, mindful of the rewards should they succeed, from meddling. Mr Macron will not be the only leader to greet it with a Gallic shrug.” [1]

·  ·  · 1. "Welcome to the era of AI nationalism." The Economist, 1 Jan. 2024, p. NA.

Emigrate if you can: Future pensioners in Lithuania are promised a bleak outlook, as the state will not provide even a third of their former income

Prices in Lithuania are exorbitant, salaries are low. It is not possible to save for old age. Pensions in Lithuania are a mockery. Sooner or later, we will all reach that retirement age.

 

     "The young people of our country who are currently entering the labor market, when they reach old age, can expect that the state pension will not make up even a third of their income, according to a new study by the Agency for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). Experts say that the assumptions of this study are open to criticism, but this does not change the fact that Lithuania should be more concerned about the welfare of future pensioners.

 

     The recently published OECD report states that the current 22-year-olds, who are just now entering the labor market, will receive a pension from the Lithuanian state when they reach old age, which will amount to only 28.9 percent of their former income. This is the lowest rate among the 39 countries examined in the study.

 

     According to the OECD, Portugal will be the most generous to its pensioners in four decades, with a state pension of 98.8% former income. 90 percent pensions should exceed the former income limit in Turkey, the Netherlands and Greece.

 

     The average of this indicator in OECD countries is twice as high as in Lithuania - 61.4 percent.

 

     The OECD calculations compare pensions with expected average wages, and also assume that the laws defining the size and calculation procedure of pensions in the states will remain as they are now.

    

     Experts interviewed by Delfi say that the OECD's assumptions are not necessarily correct, so the reality may be quite different. On the other hand, it is obvious that we have a programmed problem in the current pension system of our country.

 

     Attitude is also to blame

 

     Vilnius University professor Romas Lazutka, who shared the OECD data on Facebook, says that the small future state pensions in our country are also programmed in the Lithuanian attitude towards the pensioners themselves, which needs to be changed.

 

     "We don't consider an old person to be still a person. Here is the legacy of an agrarian society, when it seems that a person has raised children and he can no longer want anything, he has to settle for a poor existence. This has been the case throughout the period of Independence", says R. Lazutka.

 

     According to him, an illustration of such an attitude can be seen by looking at customers of cafes in Lithuania and foreign countries. We will see almost exclusively young people at the tables, at that time in the West people of all age groups are entertained.

 

    According to R. Lazutka, the OECD calculations are based on the currently valid Pensions Law. According to him, pensions in our country are indexed every year, linking their size to the average salary, but, according to the interviewer, this is not enough.

 

     "The indexing formula is such that pensions are increased as much as the average salary of working people and the number of employed people increase. However, not only the average wage growth of the past three years is taken into account, but also the forecast of how much wages will grow in the next three years. But the Ministry of Finance tends to lower its forecasts. For the past few years, wages have grown by approximately 9-12 percent, while forecasts predicted 5-6 percent," explains R. Lazutka.

 

     As a result, he says, a situation arises where wages are growing faster than pensions, and the gap between working income and pensions is widening.

 

     The professor notes that rising salaries increase the income of "Sodra", and the budget of this institution is planned with more than 0.5 billion euro reserve in the coming years. So there is money for higher pensions, but the law works in such a way that it cannot be increased faster. And the OECD data shows where it will ultimately lead."

 


Kas galite, emigruokite: būsimiems pensininkams Lietuvoje žada niūrią perspektyvą, nes valstybė neužtikrins nė trečdalio buvusių pajamų

 Kainos Lietuvoje yra kosminės, algos mažos. Susitaupyti senatvei neišeina. Pensijos Lietuvoje yra pasityčiojimas. O juk visi sulauksime to pensijinio amžiaus.

"Į darbo rinką šiuo metu žengiantys mūsų šalies jaunuoliai, sulaukę senatvės, gali tikėtis, kad valstybinė jų pensija nesudarys nė trečdalio pajamų, rodo naujas Ekonominio bendradarbiavimo ir plėtros agentūros (EBPO) tyrimas. Ekspertai sako, kad šio tyrimo prielaidos yra kritikuotinos, tačiau tai nekeičia fakto, jog Lietuvai reikėtų labiau susirūpinti ateities pensininkų gerove.

Neseniai paskelbtoje EBPO ataskaitoje teigiama, kad dabartiniai 22-ejų metų jaunuoliai, kaip tik dabar žengiantys į darbo rinką, sulaukę senatvės iš Lietuvos valstybės gaus pensiją, kuri sudarys vos 28,9 proc. jų buvusių pajamų. Tai yra mažiausias rodiklis tarp 39 tyrime nagrinėtų valstybių.

Dosniausia po gerų keturių dešimtmečių savo pensininkams, anot EBPO, bus Portugalija, kurioje valstybinė pensija sudarys 98,8 proc. buvusių pajamų. 90 proc. buvusių pajamų ribą pensijos turėtų viršyti Turkijoje, Nyderlanduose ir Graikijoje.

Šio rodiklio vidurkis EBPO šalyse siekia dvigubai daugiau nei Lietuvoje – 61,4 procento.

EBPO skaičiavimuose pensijos lyginamos su tikėtinu vidutiniu atlyginimu, taip pat daroma prielaida, kad pensijų dydį ir apskaičiavimo tvarką apibrėžiantys įstatymai valstybėse liks tokie, kokie yra dabar.

 

Delfi kalbinti ekspertai sako, kad EBPO prielaidos nebūtinai yra teisingos, todėl realybė gali būti visai kitokia. Kita vertus, akivaizdu, jog dabartinėje mūsų šalies pensijų sistemoje turime užprogramuotą problemą.

Kaltas ir požiūris

EBPO duomenimis feisbuke pasidalijęs Vilniaus universiteto profesorius Romas Lazutka Delfi teigia, kad mažos valstybinės ateities pensijos mūsų šalyje yra užprogramuotos ir lietuviškame požiūryje į pačius pensininkus, kurį būtina keisti.

„Pas mus nelaikoma, kad pasenęs žmogus vis dar yra žmogus. Čia toks agrarinės visuomenės palikimas, kai atrodo, kad žmogus užaugino vaikus ir jis nebegali nieko norėti, turi tenkintis skurdžiu pragyvenimu. Taip yra visą Nepriklausomybės laikotarpį“, – kalba R. Lazutka.

Pasak jo, tokio požiūrio iliustraciją galima pamatyti ir pasidairius į kavinių klientus Lietuvoje ir užsienio šalyse. Pas mus prie staliukų matysime beveik vien jaunus žmones, tuo metu Vakaruose pramogauja visų amžiaus grupių gyventojai.

 

R. Lazutkos teigimu, EBPO skaičiavimai grindžiami šiuo metu galiojančiu Pensijų įstatymu. Pagal jį, pensijos mūsų šalyje kasmet yra indeksuojamos, siejant jų dydį su vidutiniu atlyginimu, tačiau, pasak pašnekovo, to neužtenka.

„To indeksavimo formulė yra tokia, kad pensijos didinamos tiek, kiek didėja dirbančių žmonių vidutinė alga ir dirbančiųjų skaičius. Tačiau atsižvelgiama ne tik į buvusių trejų metų vidutinio atlyginimo augimą, bet ir prognozę, kiek atlyginimai augs ateinančius trejus metus. Bet Finansų ministerija savo prognozes yra linkusi pamažinti. Jei pastaruosius kelis metus algos augo maždaug 9-12 proc., o prognozės numatė 5-6 proc.“, – aiškina R. Lazutka.

Todėl, sako jis, susidaro situacija, kai atlyginimai auga sparčiau nei pensijos, o atotrūkis tarp dirbančiųjų pajamų ir pensijų didėja.

Profesorius pažymi, kad augantys atlyginimai didina „Sodros“ pajamas, o šios institucijos biudžetas ateinančiais metais suplanuotas su daugiau kaip 0,5 mlrd. eurų rezervu. Tad pinigų didesnėms pensijoms yra, tačiau įstatymas veikia taip, kad sparčiau jų didinti negalima. O EBPO duomenys ir parodo, kur galiausiai tai atves."


Let's take an example from Orban's Hungary, let's stop electing "very militant" politicians to power in Lithuania, politicians who are blocking our establishment in the world

 ""Invest in Lithuania" announced this week quite positive 2023 results of foreign direct investment (FDI), the head of the agency, Elijus Čivilis, says that in 2024, one can expect "all or nothing":

Another thing, it is clear that the US anti-inflationary package had a big impact, according to which the country began to subsidize the return of production to itself "mindlessly". It's not uncommon for us to lose projects to the US, we've never even competed with them, but some companies are finding better value propositions there. Europe has now come to grips with the need for some sort of response. (...) This is a greater role of the state in financing the transformation, the green economy. And in Europe, countries such as Poland have announced 350 million euro green economy fund for investors. That is, incoming investors can receive subsidies. The Hungarians did the same with 1.2 billion euros. Meanwhile, in Lithuania we have neither place for businesses nor anything similar for foreign investors.

If any Hungarian project receives up to 300 mln. EUR subsidy, our entire annual budget is 48 million. euros. (...) The second thing is that other countries are much more aggressive in attracting investment, they do it with foreign embassies, they have a whole network of people who directly visit those companies abroad and put pressure on them at their home. Unfortunately, we do not have such funding and we do everything very opportunistically.

  - How important is political communication in attracting foreign investors? For example, comparing Lithuania and Hungary. In Lithuania, the foreign minister says that it is necessary to prepare for a possible military conflict, while Hungary is appeasing the Kremlin and putting sticks in the wheels of the EU. How much more attractive is this political position of Budapest for an investor?

- Hungary is the country that benefits the most from foreign direct investment. There are indexes that calculate which country generates the most economic benefits through FDI - here Hungary is no. 1 in the world. It seems to us how it can be here, and Hungary seems to be in a very grateful situation for business. This is an EU country, it will remain so anyway, everything will be stable, everything will be available, Hungary nobody will be able to simply take and eliminate. 

Meanwhile, they still have cheap oil, gas, cheap access to energy and great access to Eastern markets. We can be indignant here, we can be not indignant, but we have chosen a value policy, (...) and business still remains quite pragmatic. Hungarians, for example, have never had any problems with exports, with the trasportation of goods from China through Russia. I would even be interested to know how ambitious Hungary is in terms of its policy, and how much it has calculated that it is better for it to cover both worlds."

 

The leaders of Lithuania have remained slaves and sycophants since Soviet times. After all, there are millions of us in the world. Let's elect normal people to lead us.

 


Imkime pavyzdį iš Orbano Vengrijos, nustokime rinkti į valdžią Lietuvoje “labai karingus” politikierius, blokuojančius mūsų įsitvirtinimą pasaulyje

“„Investuok Lietuvoje“ šią savaitę paskelbus gana pozityvius 2023 m. tiesioginių užsienio investicijų (TUI) rezultatus, agentūros vadovas Elijus Čivilis sako, kad 2024-aisiais galima tikėtis „visko arba nieko“:

Kitas dalykas, akivaizdu, kad didelį poveikį padarė JAV antiinfliacinis paketas, pagal kurį šalis pradėjo „be proto“ subsidijuoti gamybos grąžinimą pas save. Tai niekada nebūti dalykai, kai pralošiame projektus JAV, niekada su jais net nekonkuruodavome, bet kai kurios įmonės ten randa geresnius vertės pasiūlymus. Europa dabar susigriebė, kad reikia kažkokio atsako. (...) Tai yra didesnis valstybės vaidmuo finansuojant transformaciją, žaliąją ekonomiką. Ir Europoje valstybės, pavyzdžiui, Lenkija yra paskelbusios 350 mln. eurų žalios ekonomikos fondą investuotojams. T. y., ateinantys investuotojai gali gauti subsidijų. Vengrai padarė tą patį skirdami 1,2 mlrd. eurų. Tuo tarpu Lietuvoje neturime nei vietos verslams, nei užsienio investuotojams nieko panašaus.

Jei koks nors Vengrijos vienas projektas gauna iki 300 mln. eurų subsidiją, mūsų visas metinis biudžetas yra 48 mln. eurų. (...) Antras dalykas, kitos šalys kur kas agresyviau vykdo pačią investicijų pritraukimo veiklą, vykdo su užsienio atstovybėmis, turi visą tinklą žmonių, kurie užsienyje tiesiogiai tas įmones lanko ir spaudžia jų namuose. Mes, deja, neturime tokių finansavimų neturime ir viską darome labai oportunistiškai.

 – O kiek svarbi politinė komunikacija, pritraukiant užsienio investuotojus? Pavyzdžiui, palyginus Lietuvą ir Vengriją. Lietuvoje užsienio reikalų ministras sako, kad reikia ruoštis galimam kariniam konfliktui, o Vengrija tuo metu pataikauja Kremliui ir kiša pagalius į ratus ES. Kiek tokia Budapešto politinė pozicija investuotojui patrauklesnė?

– Vengrija yra šalis, kuri yra labiausiai pasipelno iš tiesioginių užsienio investicijų (TUI). Yra indeksai, kurie skaičiuoja, kuri šalis susikuria daugiausia ekonominės naudos per TUI - čia Vengrija yra nr. 1 pasaulyje. Mums atrodo, kaip čia taip gali būti, o verslui Vengrija atrodo labai dėkingoje situacijoje. Tai yra ES šalis, tokia ji vis tiek liks, viskas bus stabilu, viskas bus prieinama, Vengrijos negalės tiesiog imti ir eliminuoti.

 

Tuo tarpu jie vis tiek turi pigią naftą, dujas, pigią prieigą prie energetikos ir puikų išėjimą į Rytų rinkas. Čia galime piktintis, galime nesipiktinti, bet mūsų pasirinkta vertybinė politika, (...) o verslas vis tiek lieka pakankamai pragmatiškas. Vengrai, pavyzdžiui, niekada neturėjo jokių problemų su eksportu, krovinių išvežimu, nuo Kinijos iki Rusijos. Man net įdomu būtų sužinoti, kiek pati Vengrija savo tokią politiką reiškia ambiciškai, o kiek ji yra paskaičiavusi, kad jai geriau dengti abu pasaulius.”

 

Lietuvos vadovai taip ir liko vergai ir šiknalaižiai nuo sovietinių laikų. Mūsų pasaulyje juk yra milijonai. Išsirinkime normalius žmones mums vadovauti.