This week,explicit sex scenes in mainstream movies the White House scrambled to address the looming dangers and considerable opportunities of AI. In Europe, the technology has already faced significant legislative opposition, with lawmakers crafting parameters in an "AI Act." ChatGPT was banned in Italy in March, but owner OpenAI implemented a majority of the demands placed by regulators, which prompted a lifting of the restriction last month.
After meeting with the heads of a handful of leading generative-AI tech firms, President Biden and Vice President Harris committed to at least tryingto curb AI's potential overreach saying in a statement: "[We are] committed to doing our part – including by advancing potential new regulations and supporting new legislation – so that everyone can safely benefit from technological innovations."
Here are the AI-related measures that the government has announced in the past few weeks:
The Blueprint for an AI Bill of Rights is a short set of guidelines — around 2,000 words long — that outlines the government's stance on American's rights to and protection from artificial intelligence. For now, the Blueprint serves as a placeholder for official legislation by filling in gaps not covered by existing laws or policies. It says that every American should be entitled to:
Protection from faulty or unsafe AI systems.
Protection from any discriminatory AI or algorithms.
The right to data privacy and security when dealing with AI.
The right to know when you are interacting with an AI system.
The ability to opt-out of experiences that employ AI.
To bolster transparency and trust in the federal government, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) plans to release draft policy guidance on the use of AI systems by the U.S. government. This will serve as a model for state and local governments, and ensure that use of AI systems by the government will protect the rights and safety of Americans.
SEE ALSO: John Oliver investigates President Biden's border policyOn May 4, Vice President Kamala Harris and half a dozen representatives from across the administration's tech, policy, and national security organizations met with four tech CEOs: Sam Altman of OpenAI, Dario Amodei of Anthropic, Satya Nadella, of Microsoft, and Sundar Pichai of Alphabet (Google).
According to a press release from the White House, the meeting specifically covered:
"the need for companies to be more transparent with policymakers, the public, and others about their AI systems"
"the importance of being able to evaluate, verify, and validate the safety, security, and efficacy of AI systems," and...
"the need to ensure AI systems are secure from malicious actors and attacks."
Biden himself dropped by to give lip service to the cause. "I just came by to say thanks," he says in a video of the visit posted to the POTUS Twitter account. "What you're doing has enormous potential and enormous dangers. I know you understand that. And I hope you can educate us as to what is needed to protect society, as well as to the advancement [sic]. This is really, really important."
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The government announced this week that it will partner with AI Village at August's DEF CON 31 hacker convention to host a public evaluation of AI systems from Anthropic, Google, Hugging Face, Microsoft, NVIDIA, OpenAI, and Stability AI. It will be the largest-ever red teaming exercise ever conducted for any group of AI models (a "red team event" means experts will attack each platform in an attempt to find security vulnerabilities).
In May 4th's press briefing, White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters that President Biden has been "extensively briefed" on ChatGPT and "knows how it works," but said she has not asked for his thoughts on it. Axiosreported that "Biden himself has experimented with ChatGPT and was fascinated by the tool," whatever that means!
The National Science Foundation will invest $140 million to launch seven new National AI Research Institutes to "pursue transformative AI advances that are ethical, trustworthy, responsible, and serve the public good" and to "bolster America’s AI R&D infrastructure and support the development of a diverse AI workforce." The Foundation already has 18 other Institutes committed to this work. The Administration has also said that, to "shape the long-term future of trustworthy AI, with over $700 million in investments annually, the National Science Foundation continues to support AI research... into the fairness, security, safety, and trustworthiness of AI systems."
The Administration outlined additional actions being taken across the Federal government that advance the AI Bill of Rights blueprint, including:
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) is looking into curbing commercial surveillance, algorithmic discrimination, and data security practices that would potentially violate section 5 of the FTC Act.
The Department of Education will release recommendations on the use of AI for teaching and learning by early 2023 so schools have a better understanding of how to incorporate it into curriculum.
The Department of Health and Human Services has proposed a rule that would prohibit discrimination by algorithms used in some clinical decision-making.
The United States Agency for International Development (USAID) has committed to an AI Action Plan that would shape a "global Responsible AI agenda."
The Office of Management and Budget, the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, and the Federal Chief Information Officers Council will publish examples of "non-classified and non-sensitive government AI use cases" so Americans can understand how AI is being applied (at least in non-classified ways) by the government.
Topics Artificial Intelligence
This is the incredible 'Wonder Woman' origin story you won't see at the moviesBill Cosby sexual assault case ends in mistrial, but new trial date comingJay Z calls out bail bond industry in Father's Day columnDubai's autonomous flying taxis will take flight later this yearFor the 892734th time, 'Stranger Things' will not resurrect BarbThe CIA can turn your router into a spyFor $28, you can hack into a stranger's internetDon't believe those ugly conspiracy theories around the Grenfell Tower fireMicrosoft's slick new keyboard comes with a fingerprint sensor built inI got so worked up over the new Twitter design that it has cost me everything'Pokémon Go' is getting raidsSurface Laptop lets you restore back to Windows 10 S if you suddenly decide you hate appsBright pink houses attract crowds looking for the perfect selfie, and the neighbors are pissedEd Sheeran thinks we're too excited about his 'Game of Thrones' cameoVenezuela accuses Twitter of censoring after government accounts are suspendedYet more confirmation that WannaCry ransomware attack was from North KoreaI can't be basic on Instagram anymore and it's all because of StoriesLorde continues to be great by bumming chicken nuggets off of a fanKonami doesn't forgive and forget if you quit the company, apparently'Candy Crush' TV show: CBS wants to upgrade your mobile obsession Oculus installing free VR systems in nearly 100 California libraries Cardboard augmented reality goggles? Please, no. We've done this dance before. Researchers devised a way to measure a star's mass, thanks to Einstein Kudos to this dude who wore the same shirt in every school photo for 7 years 'Star Wars' museum hopes fans can track down $200,000 in stolen goods 3 hidden clues in the new 'Game of Thrones' footage you may have missed Walmart tests a giant self iOS 11 will finally put a stop to apps tracking you when you're not using them 'Wonder Woman' trailer wins Best of Show at the Golden Trailer Awards The iPad is almost good enough for doing real work now. Almost. Senator: Russian cyberattack on US election was even bigger than leaked NSA documents suggest Blizzard's unofficial theme songs for their cast of characters are perfect Aly Raisman shares beautiful message about self Mom and daughter recreate kindergarten photo on graduation day and it's just too adorable Here's what we know about alleged NSA leaker Reality Leigh Winner Ariana Grande releases new album and singles to benefit Manchester victims The leaked NSA report shows 2 Google is finally fixing an annoying Pixel bug that caused the phone to freeze The NSA leaker might was likely outed by tiny yellow tracking dots Ric Flair claims on Instagram that he busted his hand fighting a Warriors fan
3.3937s , 10162.2734375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【explicit sex scenes in mainstream movies】,Exquisite Information Network