Are you ready to opt out to cancer treatments found by US AIs?

This sort of comment is so useless.

Do you actually believe cancer treatments are what the EU is going to lose on with these regulations?

Why?

While I agree that the comment you replied to seems a bit over the top, I don’t think the answer to your question is as obvious as you make it out to be.

1. If the AI is more effective at finding successful cancer treatment for Little Endians versus Big Endians, then there is a non-zero chance that the AI will be deemed discriminatory. This could play out in a number of ways, but restricted access is certainly one of them. I live in California, and I also think that there is a non-zero chance of this happening here. It all depends on how the treatment and data are presented.

2. If the manufacturer of said treatment is anti-union, will the treatment options be distributable in certain parts of Europe?

There were plenty of top tier Covid vaccines created in Europe, and a Danish pharmaceutical is currently crushing the US weight loss market: your jingoism is deluding you.

> your jingoism is deluding you

As is yours.

Who said anything about where I think this AI would be developed?

US is possible. So is China. So is Europe. Not necessarily in that order. Japan might have an outside chance if certain things line up a certain way.

If Europe and the US make AI research overly cumbersome, I’m sure there are plenty of countries that will offer sweetheart deals to the best teams looking for a new home.

It's not AI, but drug makers have already opted out of EU countries because of their regulations.

"Drugmakers Boehringer-Ingelheim and Eli Lilly have called off plans to market their Type 2 diabetes drug linagliptin in Germany because new legislation in the country could mean that pill's price could end up being too low."

https://www.reuters.com/article/boehringer-lilly-idINL5E7K23...