Home » World » OpenAI Seeks Canadian Data Centres to Boost AI Capabilities

OpenAI Seeks Canadian Data Centres to Boost AI Capabilities

OpenAI Signals Interest in Expanding Canadian AI Infrastructure

MONTREAL ⁣- OpenAI is ⁢indicating a willingness to invest​ in Canada’s artificial⁣ intelligence infrastructure, even as it faces a copyright⁤ lawsuit from Canadian media outlets, according to recent statements. The company acknowledges a need to stimulate demand ⁣for AI infrastructure within Canada to ​support the country’s push ​for “digital sovereignty.”

The Liberal government is actively seeking ⁤to bolster‌ homegrown tech companies through procurement ​initiatives. Ottawa recently signed a non-binding agreement with ⁣Toronto-based AI ‍firm Cohere Inc.⁢ to explore AI applications⁢ within the public service. Prime Minister Mark Carney has also championed a sovereign cloud initiative aimed at increasing Canadian⁤ control over computing power.

Artificial Intelligence Minister Evan Solomon has described digital sovereignty ⁣as​ “the most ​pressing‌ policy and democratic ⁤issue of our time,” emphasizing​ that achieving‌ it requires collaboration with​ international ‍partners, including the United States.

Dev⁤ Saxena, a senior global affairs advisor⁣ with ‌OpenAI in Ottawa,⁤ stated in‍ an interview that‍ “global players” are essential to building ​Canada’s sovereign AI‌ capacity. ⁢”To actually ⁤build out some of this sovereign capacity in Canada, under ⁤Canadian jurisdiction, you actually do need global players at the table,” Saxena said. “No country can do it end-to-end. It’s ⁣just way too complicated of ⁢a supply​ chain, and way too⁤ expensive.”

Though, OpenAI⁢ is currently embroiled in a legal dispute with The Globe and‍ Mail and other Canadian media‌ companies, which‌ allege copyright infringement due to the use of news content⁣ to train its AI models. OpenAI maintains its practices are‌ permissible under copyright law and has argued that ontario courts⁤ lack jurisdiction ⁢over the case, ‌as the company does ‌not conduct business in the province.

You may also like

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.