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AI Superpowers: China, Silicon Valley, and…
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AI Superpowers: China, Silicon Valley, and the New World Order (edition 2018)

by Kai-Fu Lee (Author)

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingConversations
3961263,963 (3.64)None
I think that this is an okay book in terms of giving the reader an overview of Artificial Intelligence(AI). It shows its growth and the potential disruption that may occur in the future. The main focus is on the domination of AI by the United States and China. Lee has been involved with AI for 30 years and has worked in both the US and China in a variety of positions in the technology world. He really gets into the differences between Silicon Valley and China in terms of how they develop products. He shows that our dominating position in technology can be eroded if China takes the lead in AI. I do think he seems to cheer lead too much for China and their governments support for AI development. He presupposes that this regime will always be there to support things. I do think that the things he points out in terms of the possibility of great societal disruption are insightful. I just felt that the book could have been summed up in a long article. It does make you realize that unless AI is properly managed the potential for future problems could be large. I think Yuval Hurari "Human Deux" deals with the future of technology is a better way. ( )
  nivramkoorb | Mar 24, 2019 |
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As I concluded the final pages of Kai-Fu Lee’s book, somewhat annoyed by the weakness of the ending, I wondered what this world is going to look like when AI replaces many of our routine tasks and work lives.

I can tell you what our world looks like today: interminable gridlock on Toronto streets. Thousands of cars making trips that needn’t be taken at all. Polluting the air. Throwing up pointless tons of CO-2 emissions.

Why couldn’t people make the same trips with VR glasses to virtual workplaces and eliminate the physical consumption of resources? And schools. And malls. And govt facilities.

AI could help build these virtual places. ( )
  MylesKesten | Jan 23, 2024 |
generally interesting but also somewhat repetitive. Also it felt really strange to read an AI book that didn't include the word "ethics" even once - maybe I missed that part ( )
  danielskatz | Dec 26, 2023 |
Wider in scope than the title suggests

I enjoyed reading this book because of the high level view it provides of several important tends in tech in the last decade and likely the next one: the growing significance of the Chinese tech ecosystem and of machine learning based applications.

The background section explaining the rise of and competition between Chinese tech companies for the Chinese market is probably good enough reason to get the book, because the stories in it challenge many unstated assumptions in the West about the nature of Chinese tech companies today. ( Eg. That they are copycats which map neatly to an American prototype, or that they are almost like government sponsored monopolies, or even that American companies' failure to dominate that market are mostly due to government action ).

I found his take on which industries are more susceptible to automation in the coming decades based on data categories, and his appraisal of the strengths and weaknesses of the American and Chinese tech ecosystems thought provoking. For example, that Chinese companies will have or already have the data edge in industries that mix digital and physical world operations, due to vertical integration and amount of users,
And that America has the edge in top talent. This later factor would only come into play in the case of a true breakthrough (eg in the amount of labelled data needed), so it is unpredictable. In other industries he sees them as more evenly matched.

There's more in it than those two topics. Later sections make the case that the effects on employment may be more relevant to the world at large than the rivalry angle in the title.

I liked the organization of the book and the clarity of the writing, though it comes at the cost of some repetition. In terms of things that seem missing: more digging into the constraints different ecosystems operate under, eg privacy and labor laws and their enforcement, surveillance, as well as trade secrets. He mentions there is a privacy law in China as well, but there's no digging into details comparing them or what it means in practice. ( )
  orm_tmr | Mar 16, 2022 |
Classical case of bad China business writing:
* Reduce world to a binary contrast between ‘Caricature USA’ vs ‘Caricature China’;
* Ignore the political context and the CCP’s behaviour and aims entirely;
* Fall for the ‘Amazing China’ propaganda trap, engage in baseless speculation based on anecdotes and pilots and PR stunts.
Questionable economics, non-existent labour theory.
Alright introduction to debate on impact of AI. ( )
  sensehofstede | Dec 21, 2021 |
I fail to see why this book gets such high ratings. Yes, it's written in a very readable way. Despite the author's experience in A.I., he never makes it too technical. There are not enough graphic charts, but the ones that are there are very useful.

Unfortunately, all of this is of course not enough to write a positive review. Why not? Well, for starters, there's almost no mention of India. I'm a aware that this book is meant to be a comparison between the two tech giants, but India is up & coming, and I believe that it will surpass China very soon. And now, the worst part: this has got to be the most repetitive book I've ever read. I'll give you an example: In chapter 5, The Four Waves of AI, Lee mentions the Chinese company Iflytek a whopping eight times, and this is only on the first two pages!

I still don't understand how I made it through... ( )
  PhilipMertens | Jun 19, 2021 |
Despite my complaints, it's still an interesting view of the future. Sycophantic towards China but for obvious reasons - that's where he's making a living. At the end it turns into an autobiography which I was really not interested in. ( )
  Paul_S | Dec 23, 2020 |
Interesting, informative, but repetitive, and I don’t buy into the hopeful sentimentality that machines will never be able to replace humans in the realm of the heart. ( )
  mvayngrib | Mar 22, 2020 |
Anyone even slightly interested in what the new world order is going to be should read this book. This is no speculation but insight on what is real today and what is being developed so quickly that we will all live to see the next phase as well.
  Norinski | Feb 1, 2020 |
Probably the 4th book I've read on AI. He starts by correctly identifying the superpower competition between China and the US, and identifies aspects in which China is on the path to superiority. He is gloomy about what it means for the labor force in the future, but then devolves into a maudlin memoir of his own brush with death and how that has shaped his views of humanity and tries to tie it to the issue at hand. ( )
  Mark.Kosminskas | Jun 6, 2019 |
I think that this is an okay book in terms of giving the reader an overview of Artificial Intelligence(AI). It shows its growth and the potential disruption that may occur in the future. The main focus is on the domination of AI by the United States and China. Lee has been involved with AI for 30 years and has worked in both the US and China in a variety of positions in the technology world. He really gets into the differences between Silicon Valley and China in terms of how they develop products. He shows that our dominating position in technology can be eroded if China takes the lead in AI. I do think he seems to cheer lead too much for China and their governments support for AI development. He presupposes that this regime will always be there to support things. I do think that the things he points out in terms of the possibility of great societal disruption are insightful. I just felt that the book could have been summed up in a long article. It does make you realize that unless AI is properly managed the potential for future problems could be large. I think Yuval Hurari "Human Deux" deals with the future of technology is a better way. ( )
  nivramkoorb | Mar 24, 2019 |
Artificial Intelligence or AI has already sprouted in the landscape of the new world order
replacing and promising rapid change in technology with consequent economic rewards job replacement and failures. Two giant economies China and the United States are in gladiatorial competition. Dr. Lee with his thirty years of experience clearly discusses the evolution of AI and offers future predictions for both the good and dangers of this development with comments on how the world’s social order should ideally follow suite. This is a must read for those who want to see more than just the tea leaves in the bottom of the cup of world change. ( )
  mcdenis | Feb 20, 2019 |
Lee has written a readable and informative book that provides the reader with an understanding of the past, present, and future development of artificial intelligence. He describes in detail the work being done in AI in the United States and China—the global leaders in artificial intelligence. He identifies the promises and perils of AI infiltrating all aspects of our lives. It is easy to read the first two-thirds of the book as a wake-up call for America to pay attention to the Chinese juggernaut that threatens American economic and technological supremacy. But then Lee makes an unexpected pivot. He shares his personal confrontation with cancer and how it changed his value system. In the last third of the book, Lee outlines how the disruption being caused by AI can be a catalyst for transforming human society. The current trajectory threatens a future with dramatic increases in unemployment and economic inequality, which heighten the likelihood of violent social upheaval. Lee envisions a future where AI technology and human compassion are integrated to create societies characterized by love. This is a book to be read by anyone interested in getting a glimpse of the possible futures that await humanity and who wants to make informed choices about the direction we should take. ( )
  mitchellray | Nov 16, 2018 |
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