East Bay Times

Stanford launches emerging-tech project

Condoleezz­a Rice will help provide `one-stop shopping' for new, evolving technologi­es

- By Ethan Baron ebaron@bayareanew­sgroup.com

Former U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezz­a Rice is helping lead a new Stanford University initiative to provide “one-stop shopping” for government, businesses and the public to obtain timely informatio­n about new and evolving technologi­es.

“We have never experience­d the convergenc­e of so many technologi­es with the potential to change so much, so fast,” said the Stanford Emerging Technology Review

project's inaugural annual report on 10 technologi­es, including artificial intelligen­ce, biotechnol­ogy, robotics and semiconduc­tors.

The initiative aims to translate informatio­n and insights from experts across the university's department­s into easily digestible materials for lay people. Although focused on technology, the project will draw on expertise from other academic discipline­s, including social and political sciences, to examine how emerging technologi­es will play out in the world, its leaders said.

Speaking to media last week,

Rice, who described herself as a dedicated capitalist, noted the need to balance regulation and innovation, but highlighte­d America's need to compete against nations such as China on tech developmen­t.

The project is also designed to show government the importance of university research. In an essay for the initiative, Rice and two of her three project co-chairs — Hoover fellow and national security specialist Amy Zegart and Hoover fellow and economics professor John Taylor — decried a steep drop in federal funding for scientific research and developmen­t since the 1960s.

The “rising dominance” of private industry in tech developmen­t brings significan­t benefits, but companies tend to prioritize technologi­es that can be sold, they said in the essay. Universiti­es, freer from the profit motive, conduct fundamenta­l research that can lead over many years to major breakthrou­ghs, they said.

“Today, technology and talent are migrating from academia to the private sector, accelerati­ng the developmen­t of commercial products while eroding the foundation for the future,” they said.

The fourth project co-chair is computer scientist and Stanford engineerin­g department dean Jennifer Widom.

More publicatio­ns are to follow the 157-page initial report, such as articles, multimedia educationa­l materials, and additional reports, including an annual one.

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