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 ai executive order


Republicans' Vow to Repeal Biden's AI Executive Order Has Some Experts Worried

TIME - Tech

On June 8, Republicans adopted a new party platform ahead of a possible second term for former President Donald Trump. Buried among the updated policy positions on abortion, immigration, and crime, the document contains a provision that has some artificial intelligence experts worried: it vows to scrap President Joe Biden's executive order on AI. "We will repeal Joe Biden's dangerous Executive Order that hinders AI Innovation, and imposes Radical Leftwing ideas on the development of this technology," the platform reads. Biden's executive order on AI, signed last October, sought to tackle threats the new technology could pose to civil rights, privacy, and national security, while promoting innovation and competition and the use of AI for public services. It requires developers of the most powerful AI systems to share their safety test results with the U.S. government and calls on federal agencies to develop guidelines for the responsible use of AI domains such as criminal justice and federal benefits programs. Read More: Why Biden's AI Executive Order Only Goes So Far Carl Szabo, vice president of industry group NetChoice, which counts Google, Meta, and Amazon among its members, welcomes the possibility of the executive order's repeal, saying, "It would be good for Americans and innovators."


Biden Economic Adviser Elizabeth Kelly Picked to Lead AI Safety Testing Body

TIME - Tech

Elizabeth Kelly, formerly an economic policy adviser to President Joe Biden, has been named as director of the newly formed U.S. Artificial Intelligence Safety Institute (USAISI), U.S. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo announced Wednesday. "For the United States to lead the world in the development of safe, responsible AI, we need the brightest minds at the helm," said Raimondo. "Thanks to President Biden's leadership, we're in a position of power to meet the challenges posed by AI, while fostering America's greatest strength: innovation." Kelly has previously contributed to the Biden Administration's efforts to regulate AI with the AI Executive Order, which an Administration official tells TIME she was involved in the development of from the beginning. Kelly was "a driving force behind the domestic components of the AI executive order, spearheading efforts to promote competition, protect privacy, and support workers and consumers, and helped lead Administration engagement with allies and partners on AI governance," according to a press release announcing her appointment. Read More: Why Biden's AI Executive Order Only Goes So Far Previously, Kelly was special assistant to the President for economic policy at the White House National Economic Council.


Imagine If Joe Biden's AI Executive Order Were Inspired by 'The Terminator'

WIRED

Science fiction, for decades, has been about predicting the future--and warning against it. Even as Star Trek envisioned the wonders of flip phones and iPads, Neal Stephenson's Snow Crash warned of the dystopian nature of the metaverse. Throughout 2023, as artificial intelligence has creeped its way into every corner of public, private, and creative life, it's been easy to see the lessons sci-fi tried to teach. On Star Trek: The Next Generation, Data was a bot who worked in harmony with organic beings; Hal 9000, in Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey, (spoiler) goes all murder-y to save its own life. Too often, it seems like the minds pushing AI watched too much Trek and not enough Kubrick.


The White House will reportedly reveal a 'sweeping' AI executive order on October 30

Engadget

The Biden Administration is reportedly set to unveil a broad executive order on artificial intelligence next week. According to The Washington Post, the White House's "sweeping order" would use the federal government's purchasing power to enforce requirements on AI models before government agencies can use them. The order is reportedly scheduled for Monday, October 30, two days before an international AI Safety Summit in the UK. The order will allegedly require advanced AI models to undergo a series of assessments before federal agencies can adopt them. In addition, it would ease immigration for highly skilled workers, which was heavily restricted during the Trump administration.