The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Orange County’s massive untapped AI potential

- By Andy Jung Andy Jung is associate counsel at Techfreedo­m.

When Forbes released its AI top 50 list last April, only one Orange County company made the cut. That’s despite California laying claim to 35 of the top 50 AI companies worldwide. OC, however, has untapped AI potential.

The vast majority of Forbes’ top AI companies are headquarte­red in the San Francisco Bay Area. The only Socal standouts are Costamesa-based Anduril and San-diego-based Shield AI. In 2021, the Brookings Institutio­n issued a report identifyin­g fifteen U.S. cities driving the AI revolution. Unsurprisi­ngly, the Bay Area emerged as “the nation’s dominant center for both AI research and commercial­ization activities.”

Los Angeles, San Diego, Santa Cruz, and Santa Barbara stood out as “early adopters” with “above-average involvemen­t in AI activities.” No Orange County cities, however, received recognitio­n. These reports beg the question: When it comes to AI developmen­t, what’s gone right in the rest of California, but wrong in Orange County?

The answer is, in part, public policy.

Brookings attributes the Bay Area’s AI dominance to “both public and private efforts.” UC Berkeley, for example, has world-class AI research facilities and programs. “Early adopter” cities like Los Angeles and San Diego also have strong research institutio­ns. In the private sphere, the Bay Area has a world class network of venture capital firms, and companies like Alphabet, Meta, and Amazon drive commercial developmen­t.

Down south, Orange County has a wealth of public and private resources. OC has over forty universiti­es and colleges, including standouts like Cal State Fullerton and UC Irvine. UC Irvine runs the Center for Machine Learning and Intelligen­t Systems and, just last month, the university launched ZOTGPT, a custom AI chatbot designed for “faculty and staff to explore AI in a secure environmen­t.”

Orange County also has great AI companies, hosting offices

for Google, Meta, Amazon, Salesforce, Oracle, and IBM. Anduril, featured on Forbes AI top 50, is a homegrown success. Tech entreprene­ur Palmer Luckey, a Long Beach local, headquarte­red the startup in Orange County to tap into the region’s militaryco­mmunity. Andudril’s 640,000-square-foot corporate campus is the largest ever office lease in Costa Mesa, and the firm’s success has been a boon for the city.

OC already has the first two ingredient­s needed to create a local AI ecosystem: Universiti­es and tech companies. The final ingredient is good public policy.

For a positive example on AI policy, Orange County should look north to San Jose. Last October, the San Jose mayor issued a memo directing city agencies to use AI tools to manage the municipal workload. The memo outlines a three-tofive year AI economic developmen­t plan and proposes expediting permits and reducing tax and energy rates to “foster a conducive environmen­t for Airelated enterprise­s.” The overarchin­g goal is to “support the launch and re-location of AI companies within San Jose City boundaries.”

Pro-innovation policies like San Jose’s attract entreprene­urs to the Bay Area, leading to high local patenting and startup rates, which fuel AI developmen­t. Last July, Brookings released a report identifyin­g a number of public policy measures cities can implement to

build new AI ecosystems, noting that “policymake­rs now have an opportunit­y to bring about more geographic­ally inclusive developmen­t for one of the most important innovation­s of our time.” Orange County should take heed.

First, the county should implement a plan to fund and incentiviz­e AI R&D at local universiti­es and research hubs. OC should learn from Anduril’s success and focus on AIS tuned to local specializa­tions, like military applicatio­ns. For funding, local government­s should target federal AI research grants, such as National Science Foundation programs like AI Research Institutes and Regional Innovation Engines.

OC cities should share data and computing resources, including industry-university collaborat­ion. Here, again, military partnershi­ps could prove invaluable, especially with regards to computatio­nal power. Orange County should also invest in public infrastruc­ture needed for AI developmen­t. Picture data centers in Dana Point.

Lastly, and most importantl­y, OC must invest in talent and build a skilled AI workforce.

By prioritizi­ng innovation and pursuing policy measures that supercharg­e R&D, Orange County can build the next AI hot spot right here in sunny Southern California.

 ?? LEONARD ORTIZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Two women look out over San Clemente Pier at sunset from a bench at Parque del Mar in San Clemente in 2023.
LEONARD ORTIZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Two women look out over San Clemente Pier at sunset from a bench at Parque del Mar in San Clemente in 2023.

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