Experts Urge Government to Regulate AI, Warning of Extreme Risks
  • 6 months ago
Experts Urge Government, to Regulate AI, , Warning of Extreme Risks.
'Time' reports that another group of Artificial Intelligence
experts have joined together to urge the government
to take action to mitigate the risks posed by AI.
Experts who contributed to the policy
document include Turing Award winners
Geoffrey Hinton and Yoshua Bengio. .
Experts who contributed to the policy
document include Turing Award winners
Geoffrey Hinton and Yoshua Bengio. .
The paper focused on the extreme risks posed
by advanced AI systems, which include the ability
to enable large-scale criminal or terrorist plots.
'Time' reports that the paper also lays out a series
of policy recommendations, including the creation of both
national and international standards governing the use of AI.
The paper seeks to ensure that tech companies
devote at least one-third of AI research and development
budgets for the promotion of safe and ethical AI use.
According to contributing author and scientific director
at the Montreal Institute for Learning Algorithms
Yoshua Bengio, the paper aims to increase
understanding among policymakers and the public.
According to contributing author and scientific director
at the Montreal Institute for Learning Algorithms
Yoshua Bengio, the paper aims to increase
understanding among policymakers and the public.
We wanted to present what (we feel is) clear thinking on AI safety, reasonably free of influence from vested interests, Stuart Russell, paper co-author and professor of computer
science at the University of California, Berkeley, via 'Time'.
According to co-author Stuart Russell, professor of computer
science at the University of California, Berkeley, the paper
differs from previous expert warnings regarding AI.
According to co-author Stuart Russell, professor of computer
science at the University of California, Berkeley, the paper
differs from previous expert warnings regarding AI.
Governments have understood that
there are real risks. They are asking
the AI community, ‘What is to be done?’
The statement is an answer to that question, Stuart Russell, paper co-author and professor of computer
science at the University of California, Berkeley, via 'Time'.
'Time' reports that this paper is the third high-profile
statement released by AI experts this year, highlighting
the potential dangers of failing to regulate AI development
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