Japan and the United States will pledge deeper collaboration in high-tech domains such as artificial intelligence (AI) and semiconductors in a joint statement when Prime Minister Fumio Kishida meets with President Joe Biden next month.
Japan and the United States will announce closer collaboration in high-tech fields such as artificial intelligence (AI) and semiconductors in a joint statement when Prime Minister Fumio Kishida meets with President Joe Biden next month, it was reported on Saturday.
Biden is scheduled to host Kishida for an official visit to the United States on April 10.
The joint declaration, which refers to the two countries’ ties as a “global partnership,” will call for increased cooperation in AI and semiconductors.
As part of the deal, Japan and the United States would likely establish a framework for AI research and development, collaborating with Nvidia (NVDA.O), Arm, and Amazon (AMZN.O), among others, according to a source.
In recent months, the United States has taken aggressive steps to prohibit shipments of powerful AI processors to China in a bid to prevent Beijing from obtaining cutting-edge US technology that could bolster its military.
Also read: Nurturing Responsible Online Behavior in Students by Building a Culture of Digital Citizenship
Do Follow: CIO News LinkedIn Account | CIO News Facebook | CIO News Youtube | CIO News Twitter
About us:
CIO News, a proprietary of Mercadeo, produces award-winning content and resources for IT leaders across any industry through print articles and recorded video interviews on topics in the technology sector such as Digital Transformation, Artificial Intelligence (AI), Machine Learning (ML), Cloud, Robotics, Cyber-security, Data, Analytics, SOC, SASE, among other technology topics.