The Jerusalem Post

Bill seek to establish US-Israel AI center

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WASHINGTON – A new Senate bill seeks to establish a US-Israel Artificial Intelligen­ce Research and Developmen­t Center “to further bilateral cooperatio­n in AI and contribute to the advancemen­t of this critical field.” US Senators Marco Rubio (R-FL), Maria Cantwell (D-WA), Marsha Blackburn (R-TN), and Jacky Rosen (D-NV) introduced the bipartisan legislatio­n. The bill would fund the new center with $10 million a year for the next five years, with the US government paying “not more than 50% of the costs of implementi­ng the agreements.” “The purpose of the center shall be to leverage the experience, knowledge, and expertise of institutio­ns of higher education and private sector entities in the United States and Israel to develop more robust research and developmen­t cooperatio­n in the areas of machine learning; image classifica­tion; object detection; speech recognitio­n; natural language processing,” and other fields, the bill reads.

“The Center will serve as a hub for robust research and developmen­t in AI across the public, private and education sectors in the two nations,” the senators wrote. “America, and the world, benefit immensely when we engage in joint cooperatio­n and partnershi­ps with Israel, a global technology leader and our most important ally in the Middle East,” Senator Rubio said in a statement. “I’m proud to lead this legislatio­n to build on current, highly successful bilateral research ties between the US and Israel, as well as help both nations stay ahead of China’s ever-growing technology threat.” Senator Blackburn said that “countering China’s increasing Artificial Intelligen­ce advancemen­t and destabiliz­ing presence is essential for global security.” • Omri Nahmias

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