May 17, 2023
Spooked by ChatGPT, US Lawmakers Want to Create an AI Regulator
Since the tech industry began its love affair with machine learning about a decade ago , US lawmakers have chattered about the potential need for regulation to rein in the technology. No proposal to regulate corporate AI projects has got close to becoming law—but OpenAI’s release of ChatGPT last November has convinced some senators that there is now an urgent need to do something to protect people’s rights against the potential harms of AI technology. At a hearing held by a Senate Judiciary subcommittee yesterday, attendees heard a terrifying laundry list of ways Artificial intelligence can harm people and democracy. Senators from both parties spoke in support of creating a new arm of the US government dedicated to regulating AI. The idea even got the backing of Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI. “My worst fear is that we—the field, the technology, the industry—cause significant harm to the world,” Altman said. He also endorsed the idea of AI companies submitting their AI models to testing by outsiders and said a US AI regulator should have the power to grant or revoke licenses for creating AI above a certain threshold of capability. A number of US federal agencies, including the Federal Trade Commission and the Food and Drug Administration , already regulate how companies use AI. But Senator Peter Welch, a Democrat from Vermont, said his time in Congress has convinced him that it can’t keep up with the pace of technological change. “Unless we have an agency that is going to address these questions from Social Media and AI, we really don’t have much of a defense against the bad stuff, and the bad stuff will come,” he says. “We absolutely have to have an agency.” Senator Richard Blumenthal from Connecticut, a fellow Democrat who chaired the hearing, said that a new AI regulator may be necessary because Congress has shown it often fails to keep pace with new technology. US lawmakers’ spotty track record on digital privacy and social media were mentioned frequently during the hearing. But Blumenthal also expressed concern that a new federal AI agency could struggle to match the tech industry’s speed and power. “Without proper funding you’ll run circles around those regulators,” he told Altman and fellow industry witness Christina Montgomery, IBM’s chief privacy and trust officer. Altman and Montgomery were joined by psychology professor turned AI commentator Gary Marcus , who advocated for the creation of an international body to monitor AI progress and encourage safe development of the technology. Blumenthal opened the hearing with an AI voice clone of himself reciting text written by ChatGPT to highlight how AI can produce convincing results. The senators did not suggest a name for the prospective agency or map out its possible functions in detail. They also discussed less radical regulatory responses to recent progress in AI—such as the requiring of public documentation of AI systems’ limitations or the datasets used to create them, akin to an AI nutrition label—ideas that had been introduced years ago by researchers like former Google ethical AI team lead Timnit Gebru , who was ousted from the company after a dispute about a prescient research paper which warned about the limitations and dangers of large language models. Another change urged by lawmakers and industry witnesses alike was requiring disclosure to inform people when they’re conversing with a language model and not a human, or when AI technology makes important decisions with life-changing consequences. One example could be a disclosure requirement to reveal when a facial recognition match is the basis of an arrest or criminal accusation . The Senate hearing follows growing interest from US and European governments, and even some tech insiders, in putting new guardrails on AI to prevent it from harming people. In March, a group letter signed by major names in tech and AI called for a six-month pause on AI development , and this month, the White House called in executives from OpenAI, Microsoft, and other companies and announced it is backing a public hacking contest to probe generative AI systems . The European Union is also finalizing a sweeping law called the AI Act . IBM’s Montgomery urged Congress yesterday to take inspiration from the AI Act, which categorizes AI systems by the risks they pose to people or society and sets rules for—or even bans—them accordingly. She also endorsed the idea of encouraging self-regulation, highlighting her position on IBM’s AI ethics board, although at Google and Axon those structures have become mired in controversy. The Center for Data Innovation, a tech think tank, said in a letter released after yesterday’s hearing that the US doesn’t need a new regulator for AI. “Just as it would be ill-advised to have one government agency regulate all human decision-making, it would be equally ill-advised to have one agency regulate all AI,” the letter said. “I don’t think it’s pragmatic, and it’s not what they should be thinking about right now,” says Hodan Omaar, a senior analyst at the center. Omaar says the idea of booting up a whole new agency for AI is improbable given that Congress has yet to follow through on other necessary tech reforms, like the need for overarching data privacy protections. She believes it is better to update existing laws and allow federal agencies to add AI oversight to their existing regulatory work. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and Department of Justice issued guidance last summer on how businesses that use algorithms in hiring—algorithms that may expect people to look or behave a certain way—can stay in compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act. Such guidance shows how AI policy can overlap with existing law and involve many different communities and use cases. Alex Engler, a fellow at the Brookings Institution, says he’s concerned that the US could repeat problems that sank federal privacy regulation last fall . The historic bill was scuppered by California lawmakers who withheld their votes because the law would override the state’s own privacy legislation. “That’s a good enough concern,” Engler says. “Now is that a good enough concern that you’re gonna say we’re just not going to have civil society protections for AI? I don't know about that.” Though the hearing touched on potential harms of AI—from election disinformation to conceptual dangers that don’t exist yet, like self-aware AI —generative AI systems like ChatGPT that inspired the hearing got the most attention. Multiple senators argued they could increase inequality and monopolization. The only way to guard against that, said Senator Cory Booker, a Democrat from New Jersey who has cosponsored AI regulation in the past and supported a federal ban on face recognition, is if Congress creates rules of the road.
Related Stories
Latest News
Top news around the world
Russo-Ukrainian War

The Russo-Ukrainian War has been ongoing between Russia and Ukraine since February 2014.

Russia's war in Ukraine has proven almost every assumption wrong, with Europe now wondering what left is safe to assume.

Around the World

Celebrity News

> Latest News in Media

Media
Kylie Jenner and Timothée Chalamet serve PDA at 2023 U.S. Open
Sep 10, 2023
Originally appeared on E! Online Kylie Jenner and Timothée Chalamet are bouncing together from coast to coast as their romance heats up. The Kylie Cosmetics founder and the Oscar-nominated actor served some PDA while sitting together in the stands at Arthur Ashe Stadium in New York City to watch the U.S. Open matches Sept. 10, the final day of the 2023 tennis championships. Jenner, 26, and Chalamet, 27, were photographed watching the tournament with their arms around each other and in a video shared on the U.S. Open’s X (formerly Twitter) account, she also appeared to stroke his hair. The two wore black outfits on their tennis date, which marked their third outing in a week. The “Kardashians” star and the “Wonka” actor had also twinned in black two days prior when they made their joint New York Fashion Week debut at a private, star-studded dinner celebrating French designer Haider Ackermann’s first beauty collab with Augustinus Bader. They Dated? Surprising Star Couples Following multiple reports in April that said the two are dating, Jenner and Chalamet were photographed in public for the first time Sept. 4 at Beyoncé’s Renaissance World Tour concert in Los Angeles, where they also spent time making out. Also in attendance at the show: Jenner’s ex, Travis Scott, with whom she shares daughter Stormi Webster, 5, and son Aire Webster, 19 months. Jenner and Chalamet have not commented on the nature of their relationship. During their PDA-filled outing at the U.S. Open, the two sat behind Laverne Cox. Many other celebs attended the tournament that day and last week. This story uses functionality that may not work in our app. Click here to open the story in your web browser.
READ MORE
Watch It
Jared Leto Says They Created "200 Songs" For New Album | E! News
September 13, 2023
fi7sBCMmf1g
Flashback: Beyoncé's 2008 Seventeen Magazine Interview | E! News
September 13, 2023
0NfdQ7uqlwM
Megan Thee Stallion & Justin Timberlake Laugh Off Feud Rumors | E! News
September 13, 2023
Y-k8GbRsmr0
Sean Penn on How He Filmed Zelensky the Day After the First Bombs Dropped on Ukraine
September 13, 2023
glipEcny5Bc
#TaylorSwift and #NickiMinaj hug on the red carpet at the #MTV #VMAs
September 12, 2023
nktkOV1GYuA
#kaliii has no hoes in her current area code "roster is empty right now"
September 12, 2023
qrw7NzPkfiA
Tom Brady's Basketball Workout & Messi's $10.8M Mansion Purchase | TMZ Sports Full Ep - 9/12/23
September 13, 2023
XBXZxQ0ajLQ
'Special Forces' Star Tyler Cameron Says Tom Sandoval Has Good Heart | TMZ Exclusive
September 13, 2023
UW2u75pcSws
'Special Forces' Star Tyler Cameron Says Tom Sandoval Has Good Heart | TMZ
September 13, 2023
jFnyt8MMCT0
Selena Gomez packs a punch in purple corset minidress at VMAs 2023 afterparty #shorts
September 13, 2023
Rh1pauZ_Q_U
Kristin Cavallari plays coy as Andy Cohen presses her over Morgan Wallen date on ‘WWHL’
September 13, 2023
1d2aJxIp2po
WATCH: Matthew McConaughey gives Joy Behar a ‘dad’ foot massage on ‘The View’ #shorts
September 13, 2023
TanGuA7NsfE
TV Schedule
Late Night Show
Watch the latest shows of U.S. top comedians

Sports

Latest sport results, news, videos, interviews and comments
Latest Events
03
Sep
ENGLAND: Premier League
Arsenal - Manchester United
03
Sep
SPAIN: La Liga
Osasuna - Barcelona
03
Sep
ENGLAND: Premier League
Liverpool - Aston Villa
03
Sep
ITALY: Serie A
Empoli - Juventus
03
Sep
ITALY: Serie A
Inter Milan - Fiorentina
02
Sep
GERMANY: Bundesliga
Borussia Monchengladbach - Bayern Munich
02
Sep
SPAIN: La Liga
Real Madrid - Getafe
02
Sep
ENGLAND: Premier League
Manchester City - Fulham
02
Sep
ITALY: Serie A
Napoli - Lazio
02
Sep
ENGLAND: Premier League
Chelsea - Nottingham Forest
02
Sep
ENGLAND: Premier League
Burnley - Tottenham Hotspur
01
Sep
ITALY: Serie A
Roma - AC Milan
01
Sep
GERMANY: Bundesliga
Borussia Dortmund - Heidenheim
28
Aug
SPAIN: La Liga
Rayo Vallecano - Atletico Madrid
28
Aug
ITALY: Serie A
Cagliari - Inter Milan
27
Aug
ITALY: Serie A
Napoli - Sassuolo
Find us on Instagram
at @feedimo to stay up to date with the latest.
Featured Video You Might Like
zWJ3MxW_HWA L1eLanNeZKg i1XRgbyUtOo -g9Qziqbif8 0vmRhiLHE2U JFCZUoa6MYE UfN5PCF5EUo 2PV55f3-UAg W3y9zuI_F64 -7qCxIccihU pQ9gcOoH9R8 g5MRDEXRk4k
Copyright © 2020 Feedimo. All Rights Reserved.