Episode 3296 - November 15 - Tiếng Anh - Tin Kinh doanh – Ngày 14 tháng 11, 2024 - Vina Technology at AI time
Description
Business New – November 14, 2024
1 - From AI to Hardware Costs - Enterprise Tech Leaders Prepare for Trump 2.0
The president-elect’s focus on tariffs and reducing regulation could affect hardware costs and AI deployments, and set off an M&A frenzy, CIOs say.
Belle Lin and Isabelle Bousquette. Nov. 11, 2024.
With President-elect Donald Trump preparing to take office, business technology leaders say they are bracing for immediate and long-term impacts from policies he will likely institute. That is in areas including tariffs, regulating artificial intelligence and mergers and acquisitions.
For chief information officers, AI continues to be top of mind. While the urgency to deploy the technology inside their organizations continues unabated, CIOs are keeping a keen eye on how the federal government might play a role in reining in the technology, or encouraging it to thrive.
“The way AI affects a CIO’s job is primarily around strategic planning,” said Suvajit Basu, the former CIO of Goya Foods. That includes things like whether AI will be “intelligent enough” to improve the efficiency of logistics planning, and how it will shape the workforce, he said.
Tariffs and higher hardware costs
One of the first areas Trump can make an impact is in tariffs, where the president-elect can act without seeking congressional approval. He has proposed tariffs of at least 60% on China, and 10% to 20% on other countries—lifting U.S. tariff rates to their highest since the 1930s.
Many American companies rely on foreign-made hardware—including laptops and smartphones—for their employees. If prices for those goods go up, some CIOs say their technology budgets could be affected.
Thomas Phelps, senior vice president of corporate strategy and CIO of Long Beach, Calif.-based Laserfiche, said he is concerned because the software company relies on some imported hardware, and its technology budget is already fairly set for next year.
Others say they are ready for anything. John Roese, global chief technology officer and chief AI officer of Dell, said companies are generally adaptable to changing tariff rates. “We were able to navigate supply chain shortages, tariffs, and whatever happens, we’ll adapt,” Roese said.
AI under the spotlight
Since the launch of generative AI-based chatbots two years ago, AI has become a far bigger issue for the federal government than it was during Trump’s prior presidency.
It is likely that President-elect Trump will take a more relaxed approach to federal oversight of AI, especially as Big Tech companies and startups alike have pushed for a light touch on AI safety rules. The benefit of looser rules, they say, is keeping innovation flowing.
Trump has already said he would dismantle the Biden administration’s executive order on AI, which sought to manage a range of the technology’s threats from privacy to national security.
Since the order was enacted last year, the business community’s reaction to it has been mixed. Dell’s Roese said that while it provided a framework, it “didn’t change what private industry was doing.” “It reflected what was happening,” he said, “as opposed to shaping it.”
Still, removing the order has the benefit of cutting bureaucracy and speeding up the release of AI products, according to Daniel Castro, vice president of the Big Tech-funded think tank Information Technology and Innovation Foundation. Companies interested in using AI in riskier areas like hiring or extending credit might also feel more comfortable making the leap, he said.
The move also puts more work on companies’ shoulders to investigate AI model safety and potential bias. Vish Narendra, CIO of Graphic Packaging International, said AI regulation helps enterprises understand why different models spit out various results. “The ethics of AI is going to be a minefield that companies are going to have to tiptoe around for a while until they figure it out,” he said.
Doing away with Biden’s AI order doesn’t mean there won’t be any AI rules at