en.Wedoany.com Reported - The U.S. government is constructing a digital strategy based on laws and public policies, aiming to transform the economic system into a digital fortress driven by technologies such as artificial intelligence, with its core covering the entire chain of technology production, distribution, and consumption.
During President Trump's second term, more than 20 presidential actions related to science, technology, artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, digital infrastructure, quantum computing, and government technology adoption have been issued. The main thread of this series of initiatives is the implementation of a digital leadership policy, whose core pillars include deregulation, attracting large-scale private investment, strengthening national security, building digital infrastructure and energy systems, enhancing computing power, and establishing a unified federal vision to avoid fragmentation of state regulations.
In the field of artificial intelligence, the policy is centered on the executive order "Removing Barriers to American AI Leadership," which replaces the previous administration's guidelines and directs the development of an action plan to maintain U.S. AI dominance. The "American AI Action Plan" released by the White House designs three pillars: accelerating innovation, developing AI itself, and promoting U.S. technology overseas. Subsequently, the executive order "Ensuring a National AI Policy Framework" aims to promote the establishment of a unified federal framework.
In terms of AI infrastructure, the policy focuses on accelerating construction in areas such as data centers, power infrastructure, energy, semiconductors, networks, and storage, while relaxing federal permitting processes to prioritize large-scale, capital-intensive, and energy-intensive projects, treating computing power as a strategic asset.
Cybersecurity policy, through the executive order "Promoting Advanced AI Innovation and Security," places AI at the core of cyber defense, prioritizing national security systems, Department of Defense systems, civilian networks, federal networks, and critical infrastructure, and promoting the use of AI tools for vulnerability identification, defense improvement, and coordinating cooperation among the government, industry, and key operators.
In the field of defense and national security, a Presidential National Security Directive aims to accelerate the application of advanced models, commercial technologies, and open-source tools in national security missions, with a focus on human control, operational responsibility, and computing power. Meanwhile, policies on AI exports promote the export of models, computing infrastructure, cloud services, semiconductors, security tools, and standards, positioning the U.S. as the dominant AI supplier to allies and partners.
In the area of quantum computing, an executive order on quantum innovation aims to update the national quantum technology strategy, coordinate scientific and security agencies, develop quantum computing and networking capabilities, and advance the research and development of quantum computers to accelerate scientific discovery and commercial applications.
In the fields of education and government adoption, the technology agenda includes cultivating young AI talent, conducting technical training, opening public recruitment channels in cybersecurity and AI, and modernizing federal processes through smart tools.
The U.S. government has made it clear that it will not allow any country or entity to take away its leadership in semiconductors, artificial intelligence, and data centers, and recognizes that it is currently at a civilization-defining juncture that will influence culture, law, economy, and global security for decades to come.










