Wednesday, June 3, 2026
    The GeoStrategic Consensus
    No Result
    View All Result
    • Login
    • HOME
    • AMERICAS
      • Argentina
      • Brazil
      • Canada
      • Chile
      • Colombia
      • Costa Rica
      • Cuba
      • Dominican Republic
      • Ecuador
      • El Salvador
      • Greenland
      • Guatemala
      • Honduras
      • Mexico
      • Nicaragua
      • Panama
      • Paraguay
      • Peru
      • United States
      • Uruguay
      • Venezuela
    • ASIA-PACIFIC
      • Australia
      • Brunei Darussalam
      • Cambodia
      • China
      • Federated States of Micronesia
      • Fiji
      • Indonesia
      • Japan
      • Kiribati
      • Laos
      • Malaysia
      • Marshall Islands
      • Mongolia
      • Myanmar
      • Nauru
      • New Zealand
      • North Korea
      • Palau
      • Papua New Guinea
      • Philippines
      • Samoa
      • Singapore
      • Solomon Islands
      • South Korea
      • Taiwan
      • Thailand
      • Timor-Leste
      • Tonga
      • Tuvalu
      • Vanuatu
      • Vietnam
    • CARICOM
      • CARICOM – Non-English
        • Haiti
        • Suriname
      • CARICOM Associates
        • Anguilla
        • Bermuda
        • British-Virgin-Islands
        • Cayman-Islands
        • Curacao
        • Turks-and-Caicos
      • CARICOM English
        • Antigua and Barbuda
        • Barbados
        • Belize
        • Dominica
        • Grenada
        • Guyana
        • Jamaica
        • Montserrat
        • Saint Kitts and Nevis
        • Saint Lucia
        • Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
        • The Bahamas
        • Trinidad and Tobago
    • EURASIA
      • Armenia
      • Azerbaijan
      • Balarus
      • Georgia
      • Kazakhstan
      • Kyrgyzstan
      • Moldova
      • Russia
      • Tajikistan
      • Turkmenistan
      • Ukraine
      • Uzbekistan
    • EUROPE
      • Albania
      • Andorra
      • Austria
      • Bosnia and Herzegovina
      • Bulgaria
      • Croatia
      • Cyprus
      • Czech Republic
      • Denmark
      • Estonia
      • Finland
      • France
      • Germany
      • Greece
      • Holy See
      • Hungary
      • Iceland
      • Ireland
      • Italy
      • Kosovo
      • Latvia
      • Liechtenstein
      • Lithuania
      • Luxembourg
      • Malta
      • Monaco
      • Montenegro
      • Netherlands
      • North Macedonia
      • Norway
      • Poland
      • Portugal
      • Romania
      • San Marino
      • Serbia
      • Slovakia
      • Slovenia
      • Spain
      • Sweden
      • Switzerland
      • United Kingdom
    • MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA
      • Algeria
      • Bahrain
      • Egypt
      • Iran
      • Iraq
      • Israel
      • Jordan
      • Kuwait
      • Lebanon
      • Lybia
      • Morocco
      • Oman
      • Palestinian Territories
      • Qatar
      • Saudi Arabia
      • Syria
      • Tunisia
      • Turkey
      • United Arab Emirates
      • Western Sahara
      • Yemen
    • SOUTH ASIA
      • Afghanistan
      • Bangladesh
      • Bhutan
      • India
      • Maldives
      • Nepal
      • Pakistan
      • Sri Lanka
    • SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
      • Angola
      • Benin
      • Botswana
      • Burkina Faso
      • Burundi
      • Cabo Verde
      • Cameroon
      • Central African Republic
      • Chad
      • Comoros
      • Cote d’Ivoire
      • Democratic Republic of the Congo
      • Djibouti
      • Equatorial Guinea
      • Eritrea
      • Eswatini
      • Ethiopia
      • Gabon
      • Gambia
      • Ghana
      • Guinea
      • Guinea Bissau
      • Kenya
      • Lesotho
      • Liberia
      • Madagascar
      • Malawi
      • Mali
      • Mauritania
      • Mauritius
      • Mozambique
      • Namibia
      • Niger
      • Nigeria
      • Republic of the Congo
      • Rwanda
      • Sao Tome and Principe
      • Senegal
      • Seychelles
      • Sierra Leone
      • Somalia
      • South Africa
      • South Sudan
      • Sudan
      • Tanzania
      • Togo
      • Uganda
      • Zambia
      • Zimbabwe
    • HOME
    • AMERICAS
      • Argentina
      • Brazil
      • Canada
      • Chile
      • Colombia
      • Costa Rica
      • Cuba
      • Dominican Republic
      • Ecuador
      • El Salvador
      • Greenland
      • Guatemala
      • Honduras
      • Mexico
      • Nicaragua
      • Panama
      • Paraguay
      • Peru
      • United States
      • Uruguay
      • Venezuela
    • ASIA-PACIFIC
      • Australia
      • Brunei Darussalam
      • Cambodia
      • China
      • Federated States of Micronesia
      • Fiji
      • Indonesia
      • Japan
      • Kiribati
      • Laos
      • Malaysia
      • Marshall Islands
      • Mongolia
      • Myanmar
      • Nauru
      • New Zealand
      • North Korea
      • Palau
      • Papua New Guinea
      • Philippines
      • Samoa
      • Singapore
      • Solomon Islands
      • South Korea
      • Taiwan
      • Thailand
      • Timor-Leste
      • Tonga
      • Tuvalu
      • Vanuatu
      • Vietnam
    • CARICOM
      • CARICOM – Non-English
        • Haiti
        • Suriname
      • CARICOM Associates
        • Anguilla
        • Bermuda
        • British-Virgin-Islands
        • Cayman-Islands
        • Curacao
        • Turks-and-Caicos
      • CARICOM English
        • Antigua and Barbuda
        • Barbados
        • Belize
        • Dominica
        • Grenada
        • Guyana
        • Jamaica
        • Montserrat
        • Saint Kitts and Nevis
        • Saint Lucia
        • Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
        • The Bahamas
        • Trinidad and Tobago
    • EURASIA
      • Armenia
      • Azerbaijan
      • Balarus
      • Georgia
      • Kazakhstan
      • Kyrgyzstan
      • Moldova
      • Russia
      • Tajikistan
      • Turkmenistan
      • Ukraine
      • Uzbekistan
    • EUROPE
      • Albania
      • Andorra
      • Austria
      • Bosnia and Herzegovina
      • Bulgaria
      • Croatia
      • Cyprus
      • Czech Republic
      • Denmark
      • Estonia
      • Finland
      • France
      • Germany
      • Greece
      • Holy See
      • Hungary
      • Iceland
      • Ireland
      • Italy
      • Kosovo
      • Latvia
      • Liechtenstein
      • Lithuania
      • Luxembourg
      • Malta
      • Monaco
      • Montenegro
      • Netherlands
      • North Macedonia
      • Norway
      • Poland
      • Portugal
      • Romania
      • San Marino
      • Serbia
      • Slovakia
      • Slovenia
      • Spain
      • Sweden
      • Switzerland
      • United Kingdom
    • MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA
      • Algeria
      • Bahrain
      • Egypt
      • Iran
      • Iraq
      • Israel
      • Jordan
      • Kuwait
      • Lebanon
      • Lybia
      • Morocco
      • Oman
      • Palestinian Territories
      • Qatar
      • Saudi Arabia
      • Syria
      • Tunisia
      • Turkey
      • United Arab Emirates
      • Western Sahara
      • Yemen
    • SOUTH ASIA
      • Afghanistan
      • Bangladesh
      • Bhutan
      • India
      • Maldives
      • Nepal
      • Pakistan
      • Sri Lanka
    • SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
      • Angola
      • Benin
      • Botswana
      • Burkina Faso
      • Burundi
      • Cabo Verde
      • Cameroon
      • Central African Republic
      • Chad
      • Comoros
      • Cote d’Ivoire
      • Democratic Republic of the Congo
      • Djibouti
      • Equatorial Guinea
      • Eritrea
      • Eswatini
      • Ethiopia
      • Gabon
      • Gambia
      • Ghana
      • Guinea
      • Guinea Bissau
      • Kenya
      • Lesotho
      • Liberia
      • Madagascar
      • Malawi
      • Mali
      • Mauritania
      • Mauritius
      • Mozambique
      • Namibia
      • Niger
      • Nigeria
      • Republic of the Congo
      • Rwanda
      • Sao Tome and Principe
      • Senegal
      • Seychelles
      • Sierra Leone
      • Somalia
      • South Africa
      • South Sudan
      • Sudan
      • Tanzania
      • Togo
      • Uganda
      • Zambia
      • Zimbabwe
    No Result
    View All Result
    Agentially
    No Result
    View All Result
    Home EUROPE Netherlands

    Opinion | If the whole world works together, we can control the risks of AI

    The Analyst by The Analyst
    June 3, 2026
    in Netherlands
    Opinion | If the whole world works together, we can control the risks of AI

    READ ALSO

    Family of Nazi general want looted painting to be returned

    Opinion | How the boomers screwed Europe


    The movie AIwhich Steven Spielberg made at the beginning of this century, was a tearjerker about a robot who wanted to be a real boy. Pinocchio, but not made of wood and not based on sorcery, but on the most modern technology. An attempt to imagine what AI could lead to.

    Frans Timmermans is a former European Commissioner and former party leader of GroenLinks-PvdA (now PRO).

    A quarter of a century later, the risk appears to be that technology is pushing people towards machines, rather than the other way around. The smartphone, with which we seem to have become fused (and on which I am also typing this during a conference), increasingly determines how we see the world. The algorithms that fill this worldview are intended to give us what we ask for so that we buy what they give. It is an extreme form of self-assertion that undermines critical thinking and will ultimately destroy our capacity for empathy.

    People without empathy are becoming more and more like machines. By doing what those machines propose, we line the pockets of the few people who make and operate these machines. And these are people who think democracy is nonsense and believe that the world would really improve if they were in charge with their machines. Read it again, in the recent one Palantir Manifestoand think of the statements of great technology entrepreneurs such as Peter Thiel and Elon Musk.

    The AI ​​race between the US and China is reminiscent of the Cold War arms race. Then the US and the Soviet Union came to their senses just in time to prevent a catastrophe and initiate arms control through multilateral negotiations. Such awareness is completely lacking in AI. This week I again heard Maga-Americans at a conference in Athens shouting that there can only be one winner, the US or China, as if we were in an episode of Highlander have ended up.

    Meanwhile, AI threatens to run amok. Even in Silicon Valley there are voices saying that technology is literally becoming inimitable and perhaps uncontrollable. Every word of warning, every plea for precautionary delay, is brushed aside out of fear of a Chinese advantage. Nowadays, in the US alone, more than $1 trillion invested in AI and the boom on the American stock market can almost entirely be traced back to this.

    Serious diseases

    The potential of AI is beyond our imagination. It can already be established that it can provide a tremendous boost to the development of new medicines and medical treatments. Early diagnosis of serious diseases at the cellular level may save millions of lives, but the rapid development of new vaccines can save the world from mass graves and untold economic damage in the next pandemic. The refined modulation of an unimaginable amount of data can accelerate the energy transition and make sustainable energy much more efficient and, above all, more reliable.

    It can also help us to identify and combat biodiversity loss and associated major health risks in time, and it can help us prevent crop failures and food shortages. And everyone who needs to get from A to B will be able to move much more safely using means of transport without human operation. In the future, driving yourself, except on a bicycle of course, will be a major exception.

    There are plenty of examples of the misery that can arise when vulnerable children build a deep emotional bond with algorithms

    The risks and danger to people decrease exponentially and that is a blessing in these applications. This also partly applies to military applications, but these can also be a curse if the threshold for violence is lowered, because soldiers run no or less risk than opponents with less autonomous weapon systems. Operating drones and other unmanned systems from a great distance in a safe location is different from looking the enemy directly in the eye. Not to mention that there are now systems active on the battlefield that are given a single assignment, such as clearing mines or taking prisoners of war, and then make plans completely autonomously to complete that assignment – sometimes with astonishing results.

    Inequality

    Every industrial revolution has produced new machines and technologies that make life easier for people and that replace us in one place so that we can do finer, less demanding and better-paid work in other places. Or having to work much less. It is an open question whether this will by definition also be the case with AI. The influence of AI is potentially greater and will also materialize more quickly than previous technological leaps forward. AI can therefore lead to very large economic and social inequalities that can quickly escalate tensions within societies and between countries and continents.

    Smartphones, the internet and social media threaten to turn modern man into a Narcissus: constantly staring at our reflection on the screen without knowing that we are only presented with ourselves in endlessly different guises by increasingly smarter algorithms. We are sucked into an echo chamber of sameness that makes us increasingly insensitive and eventually distrustful and fearful of anyone who is different.

    Our inventiveness dulls, our curiosity is lost and our capacity for empathy disappears completely. By allowing algorithms into the most intimate parts of our lives, we risk losing interpersonal intimacy. There are now plenty of examples of the misery that can arise when vulnerable children, in particular, build a deep emotional bond with algorithms that have taken the place of personal relationships.

    The erosion of solidarity and social cohesion is a direct consequence of the loss of confidence in a good future. When retrograde thinking dominates, the willingness to share falls prey to the desire to keep what you have. The other person’s concerns will then be your concern. The other becomes a threat and a danger that must be kept at bay. This situation is exacerbated by the internet bubbles we are in, and could become even more pronounced due to AI.

    Limit and direct

    But the reverse must also be possible. Algorithms are not an uncontrollable natural phenomenon, the Silicon Valley multi-billionaires are not untouchable gods, the AI ​​arms race is not an irreversible process.

    If we let everything take its course, the risks cannot be estimated, but it is certain that they are large. That is why a fundamental principle of responsible politics must be guiding here: the precautionary principle. Preferably at a global level, limit, direct and initiate a process of ‘arms control’ with confidence-building measures, as during the Cold War, but now with the aim of sharing the advantages of AI with the entire world, and also jointly controlling the disadvantages with the entire world.

    Many of the raw materials and energy sources necessary for the development of AI are located outside the US and China. A purely transactional approach, as now adopted by both the US and China, falls short in a world that will no longer become bipolar. It could lead to a mess, but also the revival of a world order based on multilateral approaches. Working on this is certainly worth it, if we can still muster some empathy with future generations.


    Also read

    AI was once allowed to do its own thing, but that is no longer possible








    Source link

    Related Posts

    Family of Nazi general want looted painting to be returned
    Netherlands

    Family of Nazi general want looted painting to be returned

    June 3, 2026
    Opinion | How the boomers screwed Europe
    Netherlands

    Opinion | How the boomers screwed Europe

    June 3, 2026
    MPs call for Ye to be banned from performing in Netherlands
    Netherlands

    MPs call for Ye to be banned from performing in Netherlands

    June 3, 2026
    Bert Natter discusses his Libris-winning Holocaust novel
    Netherlands

    Bert Natter discusses his Libris-winning Holocaust novel

    June 3, 2026
    Can Fender ban other guitar makers from building Stratocasters? Many angry guitarists don’t think so
    Netherlands

    Can Fender ban other guitar makers from building Stratocasters? Many angry guitarists don’t think so

    June 3, 2026
    From Spinoza to sex and summer: 13 great things to do in June
    Netherlands

    From Spinoza to sex and summer: 13 great things to do in June

    June 3, 2026
    Next Post
    100m final: Van der Weken finishes fourth with season’s best at Diamond League

    100m final: Van der Weken finishes fourth with season's best at Diamond League

    POPULAR NEWS

    The EAEU countries called on Armenia to hold a referendum on joining the European Union

    The EAEU countries called on Armenia to hold a referendum on joining the European Union

    June 3, 2026
    Dodik: Srebrenica and the surrounding villages are a place of Serbian suffering, but also of pride

    Dodik: Srebrenica and the surrounding villages are a place of Serbian suffering, but also of pride

    June 3, 2026
    After the flood in Elenite: DNSK checks, problems remain

    After the flood in Elenite: DNSK checks, problems remain

    June 3, 2026
    Gloria – Dua Lipa married actor Callum Turner, in a London town hall, not as announced

    Gloria – Dua Lipa married actor Callum Turner, in a London town hall, not as announced

    June 3, 2026
    Slobodna Dalmacija – Ante Tomić: Not because of me, but because of the children, Mateša swore. And irretrievably lost the last shred of affection…

    Slobodna Dalmacija – Ante Tomić: Not because of me, but because of the children, Mateša swore. And irretrievably lost the last shred of affection…

    June 3, 2026

    EDITOR'S PICK

    Kepayang Jaya longhouse celebrates Gawai with rich display of Dayak heritage

    Kepayang Jaya longhouse celebrates Gawai with rich display of Dayak heritage

    June 3, 2026
    New Mexico Governor primary election results live: Deb Haaland faces Sam Bergman

    New Mexico Governor primary election results live: Deb Haaland faces Sam Bergman

    June 3, 2026
    BG Wealth investors warned against paying more as authorities flag new ‘HQIEX’ platform

    BG Wealth investors warned against paying more as authorities flag new ‘HQIEX’ platform

    June 3, 2026

    Proud achievers | The National

    June 3, 2026

    Recent Posts

    • Dodik: Srebrenica and the surrounding villages are a place of Serbian suffering, but also of pride
    • After the flood in Elenite: DNSK checks, problems remain
    • Gloria – Dua Lipa married actor Callum Turner, in a London town hall, not as announced
    • Slobodna Dalmacija – Ante Tomić: Not because of me, but because of the children, Mateša swore. And irretrievably lost the last shred of affection…

      © 2026 Agentially - Navigating shifting sovereignties and global risk .

      Welcome Back!

      Login to your account below

      Forgotten Password?

      Retrieve your password

      Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

      Log In
      No Result
      View All Result

        © 2026 Agentially - Navigating shifting sovereignties and global risk .

        This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.