OpenAI's EU charm offensive: blueprints, partnerships, and a whole lot of promises
The AI giant is rolling out economic blueprints across Europe, the UK, and Australia. I've seen this playbook before.
Crédit photo: Lottie animation by Centre Robotics (LottieFiles Free, used with credit). · source
Look, I'll be honest: when a tech company starts publishing "economic blueprints" for entire continents, my first instinct is to check my wallet. OpenAI's been busy lately, rolling out what they're calling the EU Economic Blueprint 2.0, and I've got thoughts.
The pitch is straightforward enough. OpenAI wants to help Europe "seize the promise of artificial intelligence" and ensure AI is "developed and deployed by Europe, in Europe, for Europe." That last bit made me chuckle. When I was at Kuka, we used to hear similar lines from American automation vendors who'd show up in Augsburg with PowerPoints about how their solutions were really about German manufacturing excellence. Usually meant they wanted our customer list.
But let me complicate my own cynicism here, because the situation's more nuanced than my gut reaction suggests.
What's actually in these blueprints?
The EU blueprint is part of a broader push. OpenAI's also announced a UK Government partnership and published an Australian blueprint with Mandala Partners. The common thread is productivity: they're positioning AI adoption as the answer to sluggish economic growth.
The specifics remain a bit fuzzy, which is par for the course with these announcements. We're talking about "accelerating AI adoption, skills, and growth" and "unlocking full economic and social potential." I'd love to see the actual numbers on projected job creation versus displacement, but those details aren't in the public materials I found.
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