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Securing America’s Scientific Leadership Takes Innovation
From:
Rick Smith --  News USA Rick Smith -- News USA
For Immediate Release:
Dateline: Washington, DC
Tuesday, January 28, 2025

 

(NewsUSA) - The United States was once the global leader in science and technology, but now other countries, notably China, are catching up, in part by leveraging data through artificial intelligence, according to experts at the Special Competitive Studies Project (SCSP), a nonprofit and nonpartisan initiative with a goal of making recommendations to strengthen America's long-term competitiveness in AI.

In a recent podcast, SCSP experts outlined how the U.S. must use data to our scientific advantage to maintain global leadership.

“Today's greatest scientific challenges – discovering life-saving therapeutics, achieving energy independence, creating new materials, and ensuring agricultural resilience – are tremendously complex, encompassing billions of variables, intricate system interactions, and patterns that emerge only across massive and diverse datasets,” said SCSP analyst Ananmay Agarwal in the podcast.

The SCSP experts offered suggestions for the new administration to strengthen the U.S. position with regard to scientific data:

Strengthen U.S. Data Sovereignty. Develop a "Made in America" Data Standards Framework prioritizing national security, innovation, and individual rights, and mandate federal agencies to use secure and transparent data practices aligned with national security priorities.

Streamline Data Sharing. While Prioritizing National Security. Create a "Secure Data Exchange Framework" to promote data sharing, but with stringent controls to protect sensitive information and prioritize national security.

Empower Rural Communities with Data Hubs. Create regional data hubs in rural and economically disadvantaged areas to harness the power of data for local development. Provide incentives for tech companies to operate in rural communities and implement data training programs tailored to local industries.

Establish Secure Research Enclaves with Allies. Create secure environments for collaborative research between the United States and our core allies, in part by developing facilities for joint research under strict access controls. Integrate allied personnel into U.S. laboratories and implement reciprocal arrangements with partners abroad.

Strengthen Screening for International Research Collaborations. Establish clearer guidelines for evaluating foreign partnerships in sensitive research fields, and require security reviews for universities and labs involved in research with foreign entities.

Establish an Allied Open Science Framework. Promote the co-development of open science standards among trusted allies to facilitate secure data and knowledge sharing. Create multilateral agreements to share non-sensitive data and host a summit to coordinate these efforts.

Expand U.S. Leadership in International Standards-Setting Bodies. Deploy senior diplomats and technical experts to international standards-setting organizations. Strengthen coalitions and host standards-setting activities in the U.S. with allied and partner nations.

“By embracing these recommendations, the United States can harness the power of data for scientific advancement, maintain its global leadership, and ensure a future where technological innovation benefits all Americans and its allies,” Agarwal emphasized.

Visit scsp.ai to learn more.

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