Washington Examiner

Here are the leading AI regulation options for Congress and the administration

The popular adoption of artificial intelligence in the form of apps such as the image generator Midjourney and the chatbots ChatGPT and Bard has led to a greater interest in regulation of the industry.

Artificial intelligence has been growing across the technology industry as a prominent tool for information creation. Companies like Google and OpenAI have also made their AI products public, allowing millions of users access to high-end technology. With the explosion in use of the AI tools has come a massive surge in interest in new legal frameworks for ensuring that AI does not go awry. Here are some of the leading options that have been suggested.

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A lull in progress

One suggestion is to put off the creation of big words models like ChatGPT until it is more clear what they mean for society. Most importantly, Elon Musk, former Democratic presidential candidate Andrew Yang, and a group of tech officials demanded that such models be trained for six months, which would be enforced by the government.

We may ask ourselves,” Should we let units flood our information channels with advertising and falsehood?” because modern AI systems are now becoming human-competitive at general jobs. In a text to the public in March, they argued. Actually all work, including the rewarding ones, be automated? Should we create human minds that could ultimately outnumber, outsmart, become obsolete, and take our place? May we take the chance of losing control of our society?

However, some researchers and officials opposed the idea of a delay because they were concerned about losing the technical edge over China and other rivals. Gen. Paul Nakasone of U.S. Cyber Command told House lawmakers that artificial intelligence machines learning is something that resonates nowadays and that our enemies will continue to look to work.

a global ban on complex AI powered by supercomputers

Leading scientist at the Machine Intelligence Research Institute and well-known revolutionary Eliezer Yudkowsky has argued for a long-term international restrictions on training big language models that are more potent than the ChatGPT model.

Yudkowsky argued in a Time op-ed that if someone creates an AI that is too prominent, I anticipate that every member of the human animals and all natural life on Earth will pass away soon after. AI preparation would need to be prohibited” indefinitely and globally.”

According to Yudkowsky, who is well-known among AI analysts, governments around the world need to take more action to halt AI progress. He argued that in order to counteract the AI threat, countries should be prepared to” destroy a rogue data center by airstrike” and track GPUs, specific processing models used for the intricate calculations involved in large language versions.

A bill of rights for AI

A bill of rights for AI has been released by the White House, and it asks AI developers to place a number of material type priorities first. These include making sure that the information gathered by AI products is not used maliciously, that designers take into account racial or gender bias in analytic data collection, and that all information is stored and protected with the necessary protection measures. Users are also aware of when algorithms are affecting their user experience and have the option to choose not to use them.

Last week, President Joe Biden discussed AI oversight with his science and technology advisors.

Stop using visual credit

The use of AI facial recognition software, which has been dubiously used by the private business in the U.S. and is used for persecution in China, would be one method for rules.

The use of facial recognition software has been outlawed in a number of cities and states. For instance, a law banning the use of programs in schools was passed in New York in 2021. In 2020, California passed a legislation prohibiting the use of facial recognition in body cams by law enforcement. A similar moratorium on facial recognition software is being considered by the European Union.

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requiring the” hashing” of AI-generated picture

Congress could pass legislation mandating that image-generating AI services include a” watermark” in all pictures identifying their origin in order to stop the abuse of pictures produced by AI.

Similar rules that limit the sharing of AI-generated content unless it has a fingerprint attached were issued by China’s’s Cyberspace Administration in December. AI-generated content was prohibited because, according to the administration, it had previously been” used by some dishonest people to make, copy, publish, and disseminate illegal and dangerous information, to slander and denigrate others’ reputations and identities.”



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