Musk and Zuckerberg to advise US Senate on regulation of artificial intelligence

No time to read?
Get a summary

Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg will finally meet. But it will not be in the cage or with fists, but in the Congress of the United States. Senate Majority Leader Charles E Schumerinvited to attend a meeting to serve. laid the foundations for organizing artificial intelligence (AI) in the country.

Democrats have spent months working on the creation of a bipartisan law that addresses the risks as well as the benefits from the accelerating implementation of this law. technology. That’s why next month legislators will begin a series of closed-door meetings to listen to experts in the field and “transform these ideas into legal measures.”

The first session will take place on September 13. Schumer will then meet with CEOs Musk and Zuckerberg. Tesla’s And Aimrespectively, and at the same time with top leaders in the industry driving the development of AI. This situation sam altmanrelated to turn on AI; sundar pichairelated to Google; Satya Nadellarelated to Microsoft; Jensen Huang nvidiaand ex-manager of Google Eric Schmidt.

All of them are battling in a business race to lead this emerging industry. OpenAI is the creator of ChatGPT, a chatbot. productive artificial intelligence That Microsoft has invested billions to adapt its products. Google is a pioneer in the development of these systems, Meta has launched its own model and Nvidia also profits from the production of these systems. semiconductors We need to support this technology.

too much influence

As meetings in the corridors of Washington sped up, groups of digital activists and consumer rights advocates denounced it with these meetings with media heavyweights. Silicon valleyMembers of Congress are getting too close to the interests of big business they are trying to regulate. Therefore, they fear that a regulation influenced by these actors may serve to strengthen their own power.

“If we want AI models that don’t replicate existing social and political biases, we need to leave enough room for new players to create them,” said Corynne McSherry, legal director of the nonprofit Electronic Frontier Foundation.

No time to read?
Get a summary
Previous Article

‘Grand Prix’ already has finalists: Two cities that will face each other in the grand final

Next Article

Doctors named an essence that fights cancer cells