Watching European lawmakers discuss AI ethics the same week that an American startup announces a billion-dollar funding round with no governance requirements is almost theatrical. There is a purpose behind the contrast. It is the outward manifestation of a deeper division between those who maintain that speed is the only important tactic and those who think democratic safeguards must govern artificial intelligence. One of the key geopolitical debates of this decade is the escalating conflict between AI innovation and regulation.
Think about the timing. When JD Vance cautioned Europe against “excessive regulation” of AI at a podium in Paris at the beginning of 2025, it was like throwing a grenade into a boardroom in Brussels. The AI liability directive, a piece of legislation that would have provided citizens harmed by AI systems with a clearer route to accountability, was shelved by the European Commission a few weeks prior. Even insiders were taken aback by the reversal. It seemed like a compromise, made because the political climate had changed rather than because the directive was flawed. The argument had been won by innovation, or at least the appearance of it. For the time being.
However, neither side wants to publicly acknowledge the unsettling fact that Silicon Valley’s success was not due to deregulation. Public investment supported the development of the internet, GPS, and the fundamental research that underpinned Apple’s early technologies. Once the government took on the risk, venture capital arrived. The libertarian mythology, which depicts unscrupulous businesspeople creating empires in garages without interference from bureaucrats, is both a fantastic narrative and a terrible framework for policy. However, it still influences the way lawmakers in Warsaw and Washington view technology. There is a feeling that genius will blossom if you simply move aside. That might be the case occasionally. It’s also possible that moving aside gives a very small group of people who have no accountability a great deal of power.

Europe’s stance is more nuanced than its detractors claim. Despite all the complaints about regulatory overreach, the AI Act mainly targets high-risk applications and exempts the majority of systems from significant requirements. Strong documentation and quality checks are already used by serious developers to ensure compliance. The true obstacles to European AI leadership are structural rather than legal. More of the innovation gap can be explained by fragmented markets, a lack of venture capital, and a strong reliance on American cloud infrastructure than by any Brussels directive. Nearly 70% of the European cloud market is dominated by Amazon, Google, and Microsoft. The biggest supplier in Europe owns about two percent. The issue is not one of regulations. That is an infrastructure issue disguised as something else.
China, in the meantime, advances using its own model, which includes enormous state resources, strictly regulated development, and little room for disagreement over the course of events. Early in 2025, DeepSeek’s effective AI model was released, upending preconceived notions about what innovation truly needs. It raised concerns about whether the American infrastructure race is motivated by corporate appetite or necessity, implying that brute-force spending on energy-hungry data centers might not be the only way forward. Investors seem to think that the moat increases with the size of the data center. However, the DeepSeek experience sowed a tiny, persistent doubt.
In a recent podcast, Phil Lee, a seasoned privacy attorney who has spent years advising businesses navigating both innovation and compliance, described what gets lost in the rhetoric as a “eternal tension.” Control and movement. Ambition and control. He suggested that it is a condition to be managed rather than a problem to be solved. Compared to the binary language that predominates in most policy debates, where you’re either pro-innovation or pro-regulation, as if choosing one means giving up the other, that framing feels more truthful. The simplicity of the false dichotomy makes it comfortable, but complex systems cannot afford simplicity.
Everything is made more difficult by the dual-use question. A military drone can be guided by an algorithm that optimizes supply chains with a few tweaks. In 2024, OpenAI updated its usage guidelines to permit military applications. Google quietly withdrew its promise to oppose AI-powered weapons. Businesses that previously claimed to be morally separate from the defense sector are now collaborating with it, exercising what one analyst referred to as “corporate sovereignty” over the application of AI. Whether democratic societies have the institutional reflexes to control this convergence before it solidifies into something irreversible is still up for debate.
You can sense the conflict between ambition and fear when you stroll through any major European city these days. In the age of AI, the continent aspires to be significant. It does not wish to turn into a digital colony where its most vital systems are reliant on foreign infrastructure. However, there is a limited path between those two fears, and each step entails a trade-off that is still unclear. The growing conflict between innovation and AI regulation isn’t really about freedom versus rules. It has to do with who gets to decide what kind of future we’re creating and whether or not anyone bothered to consult the rest of us first.
