Richard Rossow of the Center for Strategic and International Studies says U.S. companies control most of that technology, not the Department of Defense, and those companies will have to be willing to part with sensitive intellectual property and defense equipment “in a way that builds their own standing … [without] giving away the crown jewels.
Ed Morse from Citi discusses the outcome of the OPEC+ meeting and what he sees as ‘disappointing’ oil demand from the world’s largest consumption markets.
Sweden Defense Minister Pål Jonson tells CNBC’s Sri Jegarajah that the country is well placed to become a security provider to the NATO military alliance.
Cynthia Rudin of Duke University says it’s not just artificial intelligence text generation that could lead to “massive privacy violations,” but also biometric technologies like facial recognition.
Ramon Pacheco Pardo of King’s College London says, however, that European political leaders understand the situation that South Korea is facing and are sympathetic.
Dan Ives of Wedbush Securities says investors recognize that artificial intelligence is “not hype,” but a “real monetization theme” that will have a “massive ripple effect” across tech in the years to come.
Dinesh Kumar Khara, chairman of State Bank of India, discusses the characteristics that make India’s banking system “structurally different” from some U.S. banks.