Tools & Platforms
White House adviser calls for US to defend its AI lead against Chinese advances

The White House on Wednesday reiterated its call to defend its artificial intelligence lead against a quickly advancing China by exporting “cohesive AI tech stacks” that integrate not just chips but also algorithms and applications to foreign countries.
Michael Kratsios, director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, told a Senate subcommittee hearing that the US once commanded a “comfortable” lead in AI over closest competitors, such as China, in 2020, but by 2024 the gap had begun to “close significantly”.
“We stood in danger of losing our pre-eminence in this critical technology,” he said.
Greater exports of American AI tech stacks, he said, would be instrumental in preventing China from amassing market share globally, undercutting the growth of US rivals.
“To have a cohesive, successful AI ecosystem, you have to have the physical compute to run large language models and applications built on top of those … Whatever use cases may be, they need to be developed as part of a larger cohesive stack,” Kratsios said.
He said his office aims to work with the Commerce Department to flesh out more details regarding these tech stacks as “one of the most important actions” of America’s latest action plan on AI.
The administration plan also directs the defence and commerce departments to coordinate with allies on adopting US export controls and to keep American adversaries out of their defence supply chains.
Tools & Platforms
Chairman Griffith Holds Hearing on AI Technologies in American Health Care

WASHINGTON, DC (VR) – Congressman Morgan Griffith (R-VA), Chairman of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Health, held a hearing entitled “Examining Opportunities to Advance American Health Care through the Use of Artificial Intelligence Technologies.”
Following the hearing, Chairman Griffith issued the following statement:
“In the health care space today, AI is being deployed by innovators to empower patients along their personal health care journey, support health care providers, and reduce unnecessary administrative burdens. Applications of AI and machine learning have increased across the health care sector in recent years and will only play a more pronounced role in the daily lives of all Americans moving forward.”
Congressman Griffith’s opening remarks in the hearing can be seen here or below.
BACKGROUND
This July, Representative Griffith was named Chairman of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Health.
In his first public actions after being named Chairman, Representative Griffith visited multiple rural health care providers in Southwest Virginia.
Congressman Griffith held his first Health Subcommittee hearing in July. The legislative hearing focused on reauthorizing legislation related to public health and rural health care.
Entire footage of the hearing can be found here.
Tools & Platforms
AI, art, and sound converge in holosculpture interactive artwork

HoloSculpture integrates AI, display technology, and sound
HoloSculpture is an interactive artwork developed by Turbulence Lab and Hamza Kırbaş that integrates artificial intelligence, anamorphic display technology, and sound within a single physical object. Conceived as both a sculptural form and a digital interface, the project explores how AI can be embodied in a tangible medium.
The piece incorporates a 4D anamorphic display, which generates a sense of depth and spatial presence, and a studio-grade sound system that enhances audiovisual interaction. Activated by voice, HoloSculpture engages in dialogue, uses gesture-like movements, and presents shifting visual compositions, creating a dynamic relationship between user and object.
all images courtesy of Hamza Kırbaş and Turbulence Lab
HoloSculpture functions as both sculpture and digital interface
Each unit is produced as a signed and numbered edition and includes three distinct AI ‘characters,’ programmed with unique modes of response and expression. In addition, owners receive three certified digital artworks associated with the sculpture. Through this combination, HoloSculpture by Turbulence Lab and designer Hamza Kırbaş operates simultaneously as a functional device and a collectible artwork, positioning itself at the intersection of design, technology, and contemporary art.
the work functions as both sculpture and digital interface
a 4D anamorphic display creates depth and spatial presence
studio-grade sound enhances the audiovisual experience
shifting visuals create a dynamic interaction with the viewer
Tools & Platforms
Latin America’s Digital Non-Alignment Gains Ground in the AI Crossfire

Washington offers AI built for dominance, Beijing touts cooperation and infrastructure sharing. Latin America, squeezed between standards, chips, and geopolitics, is weighing a third path—one that prizes interoperability, cultural trust, and sovereignty over lock-in. The decision will shape generations.
Two Competing Blueprints
This past summer, the United States unveiled Winning the Race: America’s AI Action Plan, a strategy that describes artificial intelligence as a zero-sum contest. The accompanying executive order launched an AI Exports Program promising a full U.S. stack—from chips and cloud to models and guardrails—and urging allies to adopt American standards. Latin American officials interviewed by Americas Quarterly compared it to a “digital Monroe Doctrine,” a bid to create spheres of influence through contracts and code.
China countered with its Action Plan on Global Governance of Artificial Intelligence, calling AI a “global public good.” Beijing pledged UN-based rule-making, knowledge transfer, and infrastructure support for the Global South. Premier Li Qiang stressed cooperation over competition. The pitch is bolstered by cheaper options and tools like DeepSeek that feel attainable for governments under budget pressure. But, as policymakers told Americas Quarterly, buying into a Chinese ecosystem wholesale could swap dependencies—updates, patches, and data pipelines—from Washington to Beijing.
Both visions are designed to bind partners tightly. Latin America must now decide whether to sign up or to draft its own.
Pressure Points in the Region
For Brazil, the tightrope is real. It has codified an AI ethics framework and built research centers like CPQD, yet still relies heavily on U.S. clouds and developer ecosystems while courting Chinese financing for telecoms and manufacturing. Officials in Brasília told Americas Quarterly the challenge is to keep space for homegrown innovation without antagonizing either superpower.
Mexico faces sharper constraints. A 2,000-mile border with the U.S. makes Chinese infrastructure a national security red flag for Washington. Still, Mexican industry remains deeply integrated into Chinese supply chains, and its digital economy requires multiple partners to prevent shortages in chips and connectivity.
Chile, with ambitions to be a neutral regional hub, is marketing itself as a meeting point for data and cloud. Argentina’s courts, meanwhile, have already slowed state surveillance tools on privacy and due-process grounds, underscoring a civic culture that shapes technology adoption. Analysts told Americas Quarterly the diversity of political systems and industrial bases makes a single alignment impossible—hence the appeal of a third way.
Digital Non-Alignment as Strategy
That third way is what scholars and officials increasingly call digital non-alignment. The idea is to create interoperable standards and diversified infrastructure that let countries draw from both ecosystems while maintaining sovereignty. Some of the pieces are already visible.
Chile’s CENIA is leading LatamGPT, a regional model project where training data and roadmaps are steered by Latin American institutions. The hardware mix is deliberately plural: U.S. hyperscalers like AWS alongside Huawei cloud and regional providers, stitched together with the new Humboldt undersea cable linking South America to Asia-Pacific via Google.
Brazil’s $4 billion AI Plan aims to promote sovereignty through domestic models, public financing via BNDES, and rule-setting via the G20 and UN, while still allowing room for foreign vendors to prevent lock-in.
Scaled up, the region could form a Latin American AI consortium to pool research funds, share scarce GPU clusters, and co-own strategic datasets—from agriculture yields to climate models—under regional governance. Joint procurement would prevent any single country from being cornered by exclusivity clauses. Institutions like Mercosur, the Pacific Alliance, and the IDB could anchor a standards spine grounded in Latin American values, not imported templates. Officials told Americas Quarterly that such a move would give Brasília, Santiago, and Mexico City more leverage in negotiations with both powers.
Culture, Trust, and a Homegrown Market
Sovereignty is not just hardware and code. It is also a social license. Latin America’s legal culture leans toward human-centered tech: Brazil’s LGPD guarantees the right to review automated decisions; Chile’s AI policy is undergoing public consultation; Argentine courts suspended Buenos Aires’ facial recognition system on privacy grounds. These instincts make the region fertile ground for trustworthy AI systems with contestability and explainability built in from the start.
That ethic could become a market advantage. While U.S. and Chinese firms chase massive frontier models, Latin American developers can focus on practical breakthroughs: credit scoring with appeal rights, farm forecasting tuned for smallholders, logistics that cut port delays, or health triage tools that respect privacy. Legal scholars told Americas Quarterly that cooperative traditions—agricultural co-ops, community health networks, solidarity finance—can guide AI adoption with less resistance and clearer public value.
Culture is no guarantee. Procurement reform, data stewardship, and incentives that reward real outcomes are still needed. But trust itself can be an economic niche, one that makes Latin American AI distinct rather than derivative.
EFE@GIAN EHRENZELLER
The Clock Is Ticking
The window for genuine choice is closing fast. Washington and Beijing are already hardening lanes through export controls, cloud credits, and preferred-vendor partnerships. Countries that hesitate may soon find themselves choosing not between two philosophies, but between leftovers once the map is drawn.
A regional strategy is still within reach: build an interoperable stack, treat data as a strategic asset with accountable governance, federate compute across borders, and leverage both ecosystems without being locked into either. As officials told Americas Quarterly, the real trap is believing the only options are American dominance or Chinese cooperation.
Also Read: Peru’s Peñico Discovery Shows How the Caral Civilization Faced Crisis With Cooperation, Not Conquest
Latin America can choose differently—crafting standards that fit its development goals, embedding trust in technology, and keeping sovereignty in its own hands. The decision will determine whether AI becomes another story of dependency, or the moment the region writes its own script in the digital century.
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