Three Visions for AI
Divergent Paths to AI Governance
The European Union, United States, and United Kingdom are charting fundamentally different courses in the race to regulate and harness artificial intelligence. This dashboard provides an interactive way to explore their core philosophies, regulatory models, and strategic ambitions.
European Union
The Rights-Based Regulator
Prioritizes fundamental rights, safety, and trust through a comprehensive, risk-based legal framework. Aims to set a global standard via the "Brussels Effect."
United States
The Innovation-First Superpower
Views AI as a national security imperative. Focuses on deregulation and private-sector empowerment to accelerate innovation and maintain global tech dominance.
United Kingdom
The Agile Pragmatist
Charts a "third way" by blending a pro-innovation, context-based regulatory stance with strategic state investment to build sovereign capabilities in niche areas like AI safety.
Explore the Strategies
Select a theme to compare the three approaches or view the future outlook.
Deep Dive: Key Frameworks
EU: The Risk Pyramid
The EU AI Act uses a four-tiered risk system. Click on a level to learn more.
US & UK: Strategic Pillars
The US and UK plans are built on core strategic pillars to drive their national agendas.
πΊπΈ US: Pillars of Dominance
- Accelerate Innovation: Unleash private sector via deregulation and open-source support.
- Build the Engine: Fast-track infrastructure for data centers and energy.
- Geopolitical Imperatives: Counter rivals with tech alliances and export controls.
π¬π§ UK: Pillars of Agility
- Lay the Foundations: Secure compute, unlock public data, and foster talent.
- Drive Adoption: Embed AI in public services using a "Scan > Pilot > Scale" model.
- Build National Champions: Use state investment (UK Sovereign AI) to create strategic assets.
At-a-Glance Comparison
A visual summary of the different strategic priorities. (Scale 1-5)