Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei during the AI Action Summit in ParisPoint outThe current development of artificial intelligence technology has far exceeded expectations. It is expected that as early as 2026 to 2030, a "Country of Geniuses in a Datacenter" may be created.
Dario Amodei believes that the current pace of AI technology development is too rapid, and people may soon create "super intelligence" in data centers, but there may still not be sufficient security protection at that time. Therefore, he calls on countries to accelerate the competition in AI technology while being fully prepared for security risks and changes in traditional labor market structures. He also calls on countries to focus AI development on security and economic challenges, rather than just limiting themselves to technological innovation or regulatory development. Otherwise, they will face greater impact.
Dario Amodei believes that artificial intelligence may become a tool for authoritarian states to strengthen their military and political influence. Therefore, he calls on the government to pay attention to the control of chips, semiconductor process-related equipment and artificial intelligence technology training resources to avoid greater threats and potential risks in artificial intelligence technology in more areas, especially the possibility that non-state actors may use artificial intelligence technology to build weapons and launch cyber attacks.
At the same time, Dario Amodei also believes that current AI technology is far from sufficient to rely solely on industry self-regulation. He calls on the government to promote standardized and transparent AI technology safety regulations and to assess the potential risks of AI through third-party independent organizations.
On the other hand, Dario Amodei anticipates that the rapid evolution of artificial intelligence technology will lead to changes in the traditional labor market structure, and may also lead to changes in creative and decision-making jobs, and even replace more labor jobs due to automation. The government should strengthen monitoring to ensure that the relevant technological dividends can be distributed fairly.



