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AI
Tuesday, May 13, 2025
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia — May 13, 2025
The future of artificial intelligence has made an unexpected leap from the laboratory to the global agenda following the startling presentation made this week at the U.S.-Saudi Investment Forum. On the main stage, a fully functional humanoid robot captured the attention of international leaders and top executives, demonstrating that advanced robotics and AI are closer to everyday life than ever before.
Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla and an undisputed leader in technological innovation, was the one to showcase the latest advances in personal robotics to the world. His proposal goes far beyond the industrial environment: Musk envisions that, in less than a decade, homes around the planet could have robotic assistants as common as smartphones are today. The entrepreneur estimates that the market could absorb tens of billions of personal robots, which would radically change the economy, employment, and the daily lives of millions of people.
During his speech, Musk did not just talk about opportunities. He issued a clear warning: there is a 20% risk that advanced artificial intelligence could lead to high-risk scenarios, evoking images similar to those from the Terminator saga. Musk urged the international community to act with caution and responsibility, reminding that the accelerated development of AI demands ethical regulations and global control strategies to avoid unpredictable consequences.
He was not the only announcement of the day. The entrepreneur also revealed his intention to introduce a fleet of robotaxis in Saudi Arabia — fully autonomous vehicles managed entirely by AI — that could transform urban mobility and the country's logistics sector. This initiative fits perfectly with Saudi Arabia's Vision 2030 plan, which seeks to reinvent its economy through technology and industrial diversification.
Beyond the technological spectacle, Musk's underlying message resonated strongly with the business community: the revolution of AI and robotics is already underway, and the private sector must prepare to manage both its advantages and its risks. For companies, the challenge is to adopt disruptive technologies without neglecting critical aspects such as cybersecurity, ethics in automated decision-making, and the social impact of replacing human tasks with autonomous systems.
As artificial intelligence becomes an essential component of corporate strategies, inevitable questions arise: Are companies prepared for coexistence between humans and machines? What protocols will be necessary to mitigate failures, abuses, or unforeseen uses of technology?
The debate is open and, following Musk's speech, has gained new momentum internationally. The race for artificial intelligence requires not only investment and innovation but also a strategic and ethical vision that anticipates the consequences of an unprecedented change in modern history.
The organizations that lead this transition will be those capable of integrating AI responsibly, combining technological ambition with prudence and social sense. The future, warns Musk, belongs to those who can balance progress with caution.