Iranian strikes test the Gulf's trillion-dollar AI dream

(restofworld.org)

30 points | by donohoe a day ago ago

6 comments

  • pinkmuffinere a day ago

    It would be really interesting if this pushes infrastructure further into countries which are less developed but also less war-torn. I'm not really familiar with the region, but I imagine parts of West Africa might be good candidates.

    • someotherperson a day ago

      It won't. This article misses the almost certain reality that the support of the Gulf states for this conflict (and the others that passed, and those that will follow) came from incentives like having infra investments on their soil.

      Divesting away from the Gulf after something as trivial as this would be a complete rug-pull. And it would end the Abraham Accords.

      Don't get me wrong: it will happen at some point. But not now. Not until the Abraham Accords have served their purpose.

  • kittikitti a day ago

    "In return, Abu Dhabi’s G42 cut ties with China’s Huawei, and Humain pledged not to buy Huawei equipment — effectively locking Beijing out of the region’s AI expansion."

    This is a great point, and one that I will be keenly watching because I wasn't aware of this. I was aware that Beijing is purging Israeli technology so it's even more interesting given the article posted.

  • ChrisArchitect a day ago

    Related:

    Operational issue – Multiple services (UAE)

    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47209781

  • Computer0 21 hours ago

    One of the best things to come out of this war is the damage to AWS centers! Get some!

  • aaron695 a day ago

    [dead]