Newsletter Newsletters Events Events Podcasts Videos Africanews
Loader
Advertisement

EU and AI: Is it a lost battle? Take our poll

Chat GPT app icon is seen on a smartphone screen
Chat GPT app icon is seen on a smartphone screen Copyright  AP Photo
Copyright AP Photo
By Leticia Batista Cabanas
Published on Updated
Share Comments
Share Close Button

Can the EU still catch up in the global race for artificial intelligence? And how far should the EU go to catch up? Take our poll and share your view.

AI has shifted from a niche technology, to the backbone of global power. The US and China pour tens of billions into their AI growth, rolling out powerful models with the support of tech giants and massive data centres.

Europe, by contrast, is still struggling to turn its strong research base into world-leading AI companies and technologies. It is lagging behind competitors as the window to dominate the AI space gets narrow.

Money matters, and the gap is stark: US investment in AI vastly outweighs Europe’s, which means that many EU-trained engineers leave the bloc for better funded opportunities in Silicon Valley. Europe’s startups are growing but remain dependent on US investors or foreign buyouts.

At the same time, the EU has pursued a different path: prioritising regulation and ethics through the AI Act and strict data rules. And while supporters argue that this could make Europe a global standard-setter, critics warn it drives innovation elsewhere.

Has the EU already lost the AI battle, or can it still catch up? How much risk and disruption should Europe accept to stay competitive? Your perspective is needed: share your voice and join the conversation.

Our poll is anonymous and takes just a few seconds to complete. The results will feature across EU.XL coverage -in videos, articles, and newsletters- and will help shape our reporting as we explore how Europe can secure its place in the age of artificial intelligence.

Go to accessibility shortcuts
Share Comments

Read more

Will AI replace jobs? Anthropic report finds the answer is not so straightforward

European Commission proposes delaying full implementation of AI Act to 2027

'AI slop' is flooding the Internet. This is how can you tell if an image is artificially generated