Trump's AI E-(I)-O could let feds pick winners and losers President Donald Trump's proposed AI Executive Order, dubbed "E-(I)-O," would grant federal agencies the authority to pick winners and losers in the artificial intelligence industry. The order aims to centralize AI regulation and investment decisions within the executive branch, raising concerns about government overreach and market distortion. Critics warn the policy could stifle innovation by favoring politically connected companies over competitive market forces. SPONSORED LINKS MOST POPULAR EVENTS - Overcoming the trade-offs in data sovereignty What does data sovereignty actually mean for your network, which trade-offs are unavoidable? Learn more. - From Prompt to Exploit: How LLMs Are Changing API Attacks Modern applications are API-driven, interconnected, and often over-permissioned, making them an ideal target for AI-assisted attacks. - Architecting the Future: Unlocking Enterprise Data Services for Kubernetes Join us to discover how to eliminate infrastructure silos and establish a standardized, enterprise-grade cloud-native platform. - Catch the Advanced Attacks Microsoft 365 Misses with Behavioral AI Security Microsoft 365 is the backbone of enterprise communication, and its native security filters out the known and the noisy. - Virtual Cyber Recovery Sim Step into the chaos of a live ransomware breach, test your response skills, and team up with other IT and security pros to outsmart cybercriminals - Virtual Cyber Recovery Simulation Ransomware attacks aren’t slowing down, and neither are we. Druva’s hit event, Escape Ransomware, is now fully virtual. - Agentic AI at Scale: From Pilot to Production Join us to learn how to unlock real ROI by driving adoption of AI at scale. AI https://beta.theregister.com/tag/ai - Security Cisco sings Mythos' praises - but doesn't say how many bugs the model uncovered Meanwhile, Anthropic adds 150 partners to Project Glasswing - CxO Remote work – not AI – is killing job prospects for the youth Young professionals may be perfectly productive while working from home, says the New York Fed, but the quality of their output isn't so great, so companies don't want to hire them - Networks Marvell enters the AI network fray with 102.4 Tbps switch silicon High radix, low latency and low power is what AI datacenters crave, the chipmaker says - Enhanced performance for server consolidation with Intel Xeon 6+ SPONSORED POST: How Intel’s first 18A data center CPU delivers efficiency and TCO gains, with Intel's Kira Boyko - Security Russian spy agency says foreign spies turned officials' smartphones into surveillance devices FSB claims large-scale snoop op compromised phones of senior officials, but gives no technical evidence to back allegations Infosec https://beta.theregister.com/security - Security Cisco sings Mythos' praises - but doesn't say how many bugs the model uncovered Meanwhile, Anthropic adds 150 partners to Project Glasswing - CxO Remote work – not AI – is killing job prospects for the youth Young professionals may be perfectly productive while working from home, says the New York Fed, but the quality of their output isn't so great, so companies don't want to hire them - Networks Marvell enters the AI network fray with 102.4 Tbps switch silicon High radix, low latency and low power is what AI datacenters crave, the chipmaker says - Enhanced performance for server consolidation with Intel Xeon 6+ SPONSORED POST: How Intel’s first 18A data center CPU delivers efficiency and TCO gains, with Intel's Kira Boyko - Security Russian spy agency says foreign spies turned officials' smartphones into surveillance devices FSB claims large-scale snoop op compromised phones of senior officials, but gives no technical evidence to back allegations FOSS https://beta.theregister.com/tag/FOSS - Cisco sings Mythos' praises - but doesn't say how many bugs the model uncovered Meanwhile, Anthropic adds 150 partners to Project Glasswing - Remote work – not AI – is killing job prospects for the youth Young professionals may be perfectly productive while working from home, says the New York Fed, but the quality of their output isn't so great, so companies don't want to hire them - Marvell enters the AI network fray with 102.4 Tbps switch silicon High radix, low latency and low power is what AI datacenters crave, the chipmaker says - Enhanced performance for server consolidation with Intel Xeon 6+ SPONSORED POST: How Intel’s first 18A data center CPU delivers efficiency and TCO gains, with Intel's Kira Boyko - Russian spy agency says foreign spies turned officials' smartphones into surveillance devices FSB claims large-scale snoop op compromised phones of senior officials, but gives no technical evidence to back allegations - Expect more of those DRAM price hikes as memory shortage continues to bite Chip costs may rise another 63% this quarter, as effects feed through to PC pricing