Thank you for replying—it’s great that someone within the industry shared their perspective!
I don’t really understand why that would make the US building DCs in allied countries destabilising. The short answer for why it might be stabilising is: * It gives non-US actors more leverage, making deals where benefits are shared more likely. * It’s harder for the US to defect on commitments to develop models safely and not misuse them if it’s easy for their allies to spy on them (or they have made commitments for DC use to be monitored) * It keeps the Western democracies ahead of the CCP.
I think that allied countries themselves building DCs might be comparably stabilising—it gives more leverage to allied countries, at the cost of baking in less coordination and affordances to make deals around how AI is used and developed.
I didn’t articulate myself clearly enough — first-time poster blues! I’d argue these co-builds are a destabilising force for the same reason I mentioned Pine Gap (without explaining myself, whoops).
The benefits allies receive from these facilities are often at the expense of sovereignty over the site or technical oversight by local regulatory bodies.
Now, this tradeoff might be worth it for the intelligence agencies, but the US presence is often conspicuous and jarring to the local population, even in a remote area like Alice Springs, where PG is located. It would be especially so in a major metropolitan area like Sydney, Melbourne, or Canberra, where these DCs would likely be built.
Given the lack of trust foreign populations currently have for the US as a security partner, it would be political anathema for most WEIRD nations, at least within the next four years, to announce these types of co-builds.
There’s also a question of what incentives the US would have to create these co-builds if they do provide this spying capability to allies, given the disproportionate amount of local compute to draw upon, particularly in Northern Virginia near the existing Washington security apparatus.
Re: your excellent last point, how might this leverage be exercised in a way that leads to greater stability? What type of capital is created? Where would it be expended and to what ends?
In short, I’m very sceptical these co-builds will happen. If they did, they’d be a political football of national relevance in nearly all allies. I’m unsure how allies would use them to cultivate stability, as I’m unsure what criteria we’re judging stability by.
Thanks for getting me to explain myself a bit better!
Thank you for replying—it’s great that someone within the industry shared their perspective!
I don’t really understand why that would make the US building DCs in allied countries destabilising. The short answer for why it might be stabilising is:
* It gives non-US actors more leverage, making deals where benefits are shared more likely.
* It’s harder for the US to defect on commitments to develop models safely and not misuse them if it’s easy for their allies to spy on them (or they have made commitments for DC use to be monitored)
* It keeps the Western democracies ahead of the CCP.
I think that allied countries themselves building DCs might be comparably stabilising—it gives more leverage to allied countries, at the cost of baking in less coordination and affordances to make deals around how AI is used and developed.
I didn’t articulate myself clearly enough — first-time poster blues! I’d argue these co-builds are a destabilising force for the same reason I mentioned Pine Gap (without explaining myself, whoops).
The benefits allies receive from these facilities are often at the expense of sovereignty over the site or technical oversight by local regulatory bodies.
Now, this tradeoff might be worth it for the intelligence agencies, but the US presence is often conspicuous and jarring to the local population, even in a remote area like Alice Springs, where PG is located. It would be especially so in a major metropolitan area like Sydney, Melbourne, or Canberra, where these DCs would likely be built.
Given the lack of trust foreign populations currently have for the US as a security partner, it would be political anathema for most WEIRD nations, at least within the next four years, to announce these types of co-builds.
There’s also a question of what incentives the US would have to create these co-builds if they do provide this spying capability to allies, given the disproportionate amount of local compute to draw upon, particularly in Northern Virginia near the existing Washington security apparatus.
Re: your excellent last point, how might this leverage be exercised in a way that leads to greater stability? What type of capital is created? Where would it be expended and to what ends?
In short, I’m very sceptical these co-builds will happen. If they did, they’d be a political football of national relevance in nearly all allies. I’m unsure how allies would use them to cultivate stability, as I’m unsure what criteria we’re judging stability by.
Thanks for getting me to explain myself a bit better!