AI, AI, and More AI: A Regulatory Roundup
Photo: US Vice President Kamala Harris arrives for the second day of the UK Artificial Intelligence (AI) Safety Summit. Credit: Reuters

AI, AI, and More AI: A Regulatory Roundup

Policymakers around the globe are grappling with the benefits and dangers of artificial intelligence. Initiatives are proliferating. Eduardo Castellet Nogués , Bill Echikson , and Clara Riedenstein share some key resources.

The Biden Administration releases an Executive Order. The UK holds a much anticipated AI Safety Summit . The G7 agrees on an AI Code of Conduct. China is cracking down, struggling to censor AI-generated chatbots. The OECD? attempts to win an agreement on common definitions. And the European Union plows ahead with its plans for a binding AI Act .

Ever since Chat GPT burst onto the scene, AI has jumped to the top of digital policy agendas. Here are the major initiatives and analyses from CEPA and elsewhere analyzing this flurry of activity:

White House Executive Order on Artificial Intelligence

President Joseph Biden’s Executive Order on Artificial Intelligence , released on October 30, aims to put guardrails on the new technology while solidifying the US lead, including measures to attract foreign talent to Silicon Valley. Vice President Kamala Harris followed up on November 1 by announcing the creation of a new Safety Institute at the UK AI Safety Summit.

CEPA Analysis

Top Takeaways

  • Companies are required to share their safety test results for those systems that can be particularly risky.The order addresses the danger of racial, religious, and gender discrimination by issuing guidance against AI-generated bias.
  • Cloud service providers are to report foreign customers to the federal government, limiting the ability of foreign countries to train AI models.
  • US tech leadership should be strengthened by providing a path to streamline visa applications of AI experts.

Further Reading

UK AI Safety Summit

The UK AI Safety Summit is the world’s first global meeting focusing on the “existential risks” of emerging technologies. It targets two types of threats: “misuse” and “loss of control.”

CEPA Analysis

Top Takeaways

  • The UK AI Safety Summit is focusing on frontier models and existential risk, issues that are not being covered by other frameworks or governments to carve their own space.
  • The Bletchley Declaration recognizes AI as a “potentially catastrophic risk to humanity,” with China, the US, the EU, and the UK among the 28 signatories of the agreement.
  • Signatories agree to develop respective risk-based policies and enhance information-sharing across the AI scientific community.

Further Reading

US Senate AI Insight Forums

Senator Chuck Schumer’s (D – NY) AI Insight Forums are designed to educate American legislators on the use, pitfalls, and benefits of artificial intelligence. The third and fourth gatherings of private sector and civil society leaders were happening on November 1. But Congress is yet to consider significant AI legislation with a binding impact.

CEPA Analysis

Top Takeaways

  • The closed-door briefings focused on Workforce (Meeting 4), High Impact AI (Meeting 3), Innovation (Meeting 2), and Elections & Security (Meeting 1).
  • The Forums are designed to educate US Senators so they can introduce sensible and pragmatic legislation.
  • The Forums are a part of Sen. Schumer’s SAFE Innovation Framework for AI , which keeps “innovation as the North Star” in legislation.

Further Reading

G7 at Hiroshima, Japan

At the Hiroshima meeting of the Group of Seven (G7) in May 2023, the leaders of the world’s largest democracies agreed to work on AI principles and a Code of Conduct. But the G7 has no binding powers and critics see its code as the lowest common denominator.

CEPA Analysis

Top Takeaways

Further Reading

China

China has rolled out detailed regulations governing artificial intelligence, including measures governing recommendation algorithms as well as new rules for synthetically generated images and chatbots. Western critics see the moves as an attempt to control the new technology, with some predicting AI chatbots will challenge censorship.

CEPA Analysis

Top Takeaways

Further Reading

OECD AI Principles

The Paris-based Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), set out its Principles for Artificial Intelligence in May of 2019. The principles are designed to create responsible and transparent AI systems that uphold democratic values. But they remain principles, not concrete measures.

CEPA Analysis

Top Takeaways

  • The OECD Principles have acted as a forum for consensus on AI, acting as a foundation for the EU-US TTC Joint Roadmap for Trustworthy AI and Risk Management .
  • The AI principles are currently being edited to account for the development of generative AI.
  • The OECD’s AI principles present a multi-front approach, using the organization’s focus on economics and R&D while emphasizing privacy, and individual and worker rights.

Further Reading

EU AI Act

While some organize summits or voluntary codes of conduct, the European Union is in the final stages of wrapping up the world’s first major binding AI legislation. After Chat GPT emerged, the European Parliament expanded the law’s scope to include foundation models rather than specific applications. Critics fear a regulatory overkill that will hurt European competitiveness.

Top Takeaways

  • AI systems are categorized by their?level?of risk under four categories — low, minimal, high, and unacceptable. With obligations increasing according to the risk level.
  • Military AI remains outside of the scope. Negotiators remain divided about how to deal with government surveillance.
  • A final political agreement is expected before Christmas.

Further Reading

Expect more initiatives, regulations, codes, and events. On the first day of the UK Summit, Britain’s tech Secretary, Michelle Donelan, announced that the next AI Safety Summit will be held in South Korea in six months, and a third summit will be held in France in late 2024.

Clara Riedl-Riedenstein is an intern at CEPA’s Digital Innovation Initiative.

Bill Echikson is a non-resident CEPA Senior Fellow and editor of Bandwidth.

Eduardo Castellet Nogués is a Program Assistant at CEPA’s Digital Innovation Initiative.

要查看或添加评论,请登录

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了