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Most people assume AI regulation is going in one direction:…

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Most people assume AI regulation is going in one direction: government oversight, safety reviews, the occasional policy hearing. And maybe that's how it starts. Trump's recent move to require government approval before AI companies could release new models didn't make it into law. The AI industry lobbied hard, and it didn't stick. But don't read that as a win for the status quo. Here's the thing. The government isn't equipped to regulate AI right now. Too bureaucratic, not enough of the right people, and frankly, there's a race with China happening that nobody in Washington wants to slow down. So in the short term, the AI companies keep running. But zoom out. Nuclear weapons were once a new, world-altering technology sitting in the hands of people who understood it better than any government did. That situation didn't last. The government didn't regulate nuclear weapons. It took them over. Full stop. No private company gets to own that kind of power indefinitely. AI is on the same trajectory. Not today, not next year, but the direction is clear. The more important AI becomes, and it's going to become extraordinarily important, the less likely it is that governments worldwide sit back and let a handful of private companies run by private individuals hold that much power. That genie is out of the bottle and is not going back in again, but the question of who controls the bottle is very much still open. Watch this space. Because when it moves, it'll move fast.

Mark HadfieldJun 3, 2026Published to Linkedin - Mark HadfieldView original ↗

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