- Major AI players to adopt voluntary measures to protect users
- Biden to take further executive action, work with Congress
President
“These commitments are real and are concrete. They’re going to help the industry fulfill its fundamental obligation to Americans to develop safe, secure and trustworthy technologies that benefit society and uphold our values,” Biden said Friday.
Executives from
Biden said the company measures are only the first step and pledged to take executive actions while working with Congress to enact rules and regulations governing AI. “We must be clear eyed and vigilant about the threats,” he said.
Earlier:
The companies have agreed to put new artificial-intelligence systems through internal and external tests before their release and have outside teams probe for security flaws, discriminatory tendencies or risks to consumer privacy, health information or safety. The firms have also promised to share information with governments, civil society and academia, and report vulnerabilities.
“These commitments, which companies will implement immediately, underscore three fundamental principles: safety, security and trust,” Biden said.
Friday’s guidelines are the result of months of behind-the-scenes lobbying. Biden and Vice President
Biden’s aides say artificial intelligence has been a top priority for the president, who frequently brings up the topic in meetings with advisers. He has also directed Cabinet secretaries to examine how the technology might intersect with their agencies.
The package of safeguards formalizes and expands some measures already being undertaken at major AI firms and the commitments are only voluntary. The guidelines do not require approval from specific outside groups before companies can release AI technologies and the firms are only required to report — not eliminate — risks like possible inappropriate use or bias.
“It’s a moving target,” said White House Chief of Staff
Zients and other administration officials have said it will be difficult to keep pace with emerging technologies without legislation from Congress that imposes stricter rules and includes dedicated funding for regulators.
“They’re going to require some new laws, regulations and oversight,” Biden said Friday.
Evolving Technology
AI companies ahead of the meeting said the steps would better manage the risks from a technology that is rapidly evolving and that has seen public interest explode in recent months.
Microsoft President
The White House said it consulted the governments of 20 other countries before Friday’s announcement. But the pace of oversight is already lagging behind AI developments.
In Europe, the EU’s AI Act is far ahead of anything passed by the US Congress but leaders there have recognized that companies will need to make voluntary commitments to safeguard their technology before the law is in place.
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Meghashyam Mali, Jordan Fabian
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