GLOBAL PERSPECTIVES
Google's AI Work in China Stirs Questions of Allegiance and National Security
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Nov 12, 2019 | 10:00 GMT

Google's office building in Beijing. The company's priorities have come into question after it opened an artificial intelligence research lab in China while deciding to end its AI work with the Pentagon.
(Visual China Group via Getty Images)
Highlights
- Tech billionaire Peter Thiel sparked a debate this summer when he declared Google's artificial intelligence work in China bad for U.S. national security.
- AI fundamentally is a military technology; at best Google is ill-informed of Beijing's intent if it thinks its work with China is benign, Thiel and others argue.
- Thiel's argument raises important questions about national and corporate priorities as Google and other tech giants pursue their international business interests.
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