The United States government will let AI companies self-regulate for their own good

Alfonso Maruccia

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Staff
A hot potato: Since taking office, the Biden-Harris Administration has seemingly been busy developing a code of conduct of sorts for AI companies. The code, which has now been signed by seven "leading" corporations working in the generative AI business, should provide the entire AI market with a safer, more secure and transparent development process.

The White House recently persuaded Amazon, Anthropic, Google, Inflection, Meta, Microsoft, and OpenAI to sign a document dictating several voluntary commitments for ensuring a "Safe, Secure, and Trustworthy" AI. Many things could change in the months to come, starting with a yet unknown watermarking system that should provide users with an easy way to detect AI-generated content.

Companies developing AI systems have a responsibility to ensure that their products are safe, the White House said, upholding the "highest standards" to nurture innovation while preserving Americans' rights and safety at the same time. The commitments, which companies have seemingly chosen to undertake "immediately," should mark a critical step toward developing responsible AI technology.

To ensure safety, the US Administration said, AI companies commit to conducting internal and external security testing of their products before releasing them to the public. Companies will also share information across the industry, academia, and government to manage AI risks, invest in cyber-security and will facilitate "third-party discovery" and reporting of vulnerabilities in AI systems.

Furthermore, a "robust" watermarking system will be needed to earn the public's trust and reduce the dangers of fraud and deception, so there should be fewer fake, yet convincing, photos of notorious politicians being arrested going around. AI companies are committing to develop and deploy their systems to help society's greatest challenges like cancer research or climate change mitigation, the White House stated, and not to simply exploit the tech to make shareholders even richer.

Organizations quoted by the White House official website are seemingly on board with the new commitments: on its corporate blog, OpenAI remarked how the company has agreed to create watermarking systems to easily recognize AI-generated "audio or visual content." Google will also use metadata and other "innovative techniques" in addition to watermarks to mark fake content, while Microsoft praised the Biden Administration initiative as a foundation for a new AI era.

According to a statement quoted by the Financial Times, making AI safer and trustworthy is a "high priority" for the US President and his team. The unbearable amounts of deepfakes, misinformation and other misleading content which have invaded the internet in these few months have finally acquired political connotations in Washington DC and elsewhere in the world.

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Ah yes, self regulation has worked brilliantly in the US...till the day came when the tax payers were called upon again (and again and again) to bail out those criminals.

 
On one hand, with no regulations, we know companies will push boundaries until regulation is made in retaliation.

On the other hand, the dinosaurs making regulations know nothing about the topic beyond what lobbyists will convince them of. So either it will be useless, or suffocating.

Either one has big negatives, but I guess self regulations at least keeps the US competitive for now lol
 
Self-regulate? Sure, while they're at it, maybe they should just let motorists self-regulate as well. Neither of these ideas is any better or worse than the other.

They're basically putting these corporations officially above the law. I wonder how much they got paid to make this decision and by whom.
 
One benefit for the Government is to have companies do their work since private companies are not really bound to many U.S. Constitution Laws. I believe this is already happening.
 
What could go wrong with corporates setting their own rules and regulations.... only a global melt down, nothing to see here, move on, watch some TV, play on your phone..
 
On one hand, with no regulations, we know companies will push boundaries until regulation is made in retaliation.

On the other hand, the dinosaurs making regulations know nothing about the topic beyond what lobbyists will convince them of. So either it will be useless, or suffocating.

Either one has big negatives, but I guess self regulations at least keeps the US competitive for now lol
Given the government was considering giving OpenAI a monopoly on what AI would be "allowed"....suggested by their CEO himself, I'll take the lack of regulation. It will bring problems, but government enforced monopolies would utterly crush the tech and hand it to SE asia like everything else.
 
Self-regulate? Sure, while they're at it, maybe they should just let motorists self-regulate as well. Neither of these ideas is any better or worse than the other.

They're basically putting these corporations officially above the law. I wonder how much they got paid to make this decision and by whom.
Oh yes, the AI companies will have promised all sorts of things - such as massive donations to the Biden re-election campaign!
 
Now if they were smart they'd get AI to regulate the companies, since you can trust the companies to regulate themselves.

After all it is programmable, however you look at it, so limits and constraints can be built in. That's the whole idea of regulating AI in ther first place.
 
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