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What blogs are saying
These posts note a growing disconnect between AI executives who publicly warn about existential risks from their technology and their aggressive political spending to shape regulation. Bloggers highlight the tension as the industry pours money into Super PACs and lobbying ahead of the midterm elections.
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Mentioned in 3 posts.
First seen Jun 24, 2026
Posts mentioning this
- The AI Super PACs Trying to Influence the MidtermsThis article examines how AI companies and their leaders are increasingly engaging in political spending and influence-building ahead of the midterm elections. Despite public warnings from CEOs like Sam Altman (OpenAI) and Dario Amodei (Anthropic) about existential risks from AI, the industry is pouring money into political action committees and lobbying efforts to shape regulation and policy. The piece explores the tension between the industry's doomsday rhetoric and its aggressive push for political power, questioning whether voters' concerns about AI risks will translate into electoral consequences or if the industry's financial influence will prevail.bsky·Jun 24, 2026
- The AI Super PACs Trying to Influence the MidtermsThis article examines how AI industry leaders and their affiliated political action committees (Super PACs) are attempting to influence the upcoming midterm elections. It explores the tension between AI executives' public warnings about existential risks from AI and their simultaneous push for political influence to shape regulation. The piece highlights the growing political spending by AI companies like OpenAI and Anthropic, and questions whether their money can translate into political power that shapes favorable policy outcomes.bsky·Jun 24, 2026
- The AI Super PACs Trying to Influence the MidtermsThis article examines how AI industry leaders and their associated political action committees (Super PACs) are attempting to influence the upcoming midterm elections. It explores the tension between AI executives publicly warning about existential risks from their own technology while simultaneously pouring money into political campaigns to shape AI regulation. The piece highlights the growing political spending by figures like Sam Altman (OpenAI) and Dario Amodei (Anthropic), and questions whether the industry's financial influence will translate into favorable policy outcomes, especially as public concern about AI risks grows.bsky·Jun 24, 2026
