July 23, 2025 News

Trump Administration Bans 'Woke AI' from Government Contracts, Mandates Ideological Neutrality

President Trump signed an executive order banning AI models with DEI elements or partisan bias from federal government contracts, requiring only "ideologically neutral" and "truth-seeking" AI systems. The order aims to counter what the administration views as left-wing bias in AI while positioning against China's autocratic AI development. Critics warn this could pressure AI companies to align with White House ideology to secure federal funding, with concerns about the subjective nature of determining what constitutes "neutral" or "objective" AI.

Google Cloud Partners with OpenAI Despite Search Competition Threat

Google CEO Sundar Pichai expressed excitement about Google Cloud's partnership with OpenAI, providing cloud computing resources to train and serve OpenAI's AI models. This creates a complex relationship where Google is supplying infrastructure to its biggest AI competitor, which poses a major threat to Google's core search business. Google Cloud revenue grew to $13.6 billion in Q2 2025, with significant growth attributed to serving AI companies including OpenAI, Anthropic, and other major AI labs.

Trump Administration Launches AI Action Plan Prioritizing Rapid Development Over Safety Regulations

The Trump administration released an AI Action Plan that shifts away from Biden's cautious approach, prioritizing rapid AI infrastructure development, deregulation, and competition with China over safety measures. The plan emphasizes building data centers on federal lands, reducing environmental regulations, and limiting state AI regulations while focusing on national security and "American values" in AI development.

Trump Unveils AI Action Plan Prioritizing Industry Growth Over Safety Regulations

President Trump is set to unveil his AI Action Plan, replacing Biden's executive order with a strategy focused on three pillars: infrastructure, innovation, and global influence. The plan emphasizes accelerating AI development by reducing regulatory barriers, speeding data center construction, and combating "woke" AI, while moving away from the safety and security reporting requirements of the previous administration. The approach prioritizes corporate interests and American AI competitiveness over comprehensive safety standards.