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AI around the world: how the US, EU, and China plan to regulate AI software companies

FOX News

Fox News correspondent Mark Meredith has the latest on ChatGPT on'Special Report.' With AI large language models like ChatGPT being developed around the globe, countries have raced to regulate AI. Some have drafted strict laws on the technology, while others lack regulatory oversight. China and the EU have received particular attention, as they have created detailed, yet divergent, AI regulations. In both, the government plays a large role.


Autonomous vehicles as a "killer app" for AI

#artificialintelligence

Artificial intelligence (AI) is used in a wide variety of products and services, including maps embedded on our smart phones and "chat bots" that help answer our questions on websites. Many hope that AI will transform our economy in ways that drive growth, similar to how steam engines did in the late 19th century and electricity did in the early 20th century. But it is hard to imagine that maps on smart phones, chatbots, and other existing AI-enabled services will drive the type of economic growth we saw from stream and electricity. What we need to see are some dramatic new AI-enabled products and services that transform our way of life--in short, we are waiting for an AI "killer app." Autonomous vehicles (AVs)--vehicles that accelerate, brake, and turn on their own, requiring little or no input from a human driver--may be such a killer app that transforms our economy significantly.


We could see federal regulation on face recognition as early as next week

MIT Technology Review

On May 10, 40 advocacy groups sent an open letter demanding a permanent ban on the use of Amazon's facial recognition software, Rekognition, by US police. The letter was addressed to Jeff Bezos and Andy Jassy, the company's current and incoming CEOs, and came just weeks before Amazon's year-long moratorium on sales to law enforcement was set to expire. The letter contrasted Bezos's and Jassy's vocal support of Black Lives Matter campaigners during last summer's racial justice protests after the murder of George Floyd with reporting that other Amazon products have been used by law enforcement to identify protesters. On May 17, Amazon announced it would extend its moratorium indefinitely, joining competitors IBM and Microsoft in self-regulated purgatory. The move is a nod at the political power of the groups fighting to curb the technology--and recognition that new legislative battle grounds are starting to emerge.


Don't expect a $550 million settlement to stop Facebook from scanning your face

#artificialintelligence

Facebook has agreed to pay a $550 million settlement over its use of facial recognition technology nearly a decade ago. This comes just days after a relatively unknown startup selling facial recognition systems to police departments caught the attention of Congress. It seems, after years of civil liberties advocates worrying, facial recognition technology is more powerful and more prevalent than ever. Neither a mammoth new settlement nor the piecemeal legislation nationwide seem suited to stop the takeover. As it announced in the company's quarterly earnings report on Wednesday, Facebook will shell out half a billion dollars to settle a 2015 class action lawsuit over its facial recognition software that suggested tags for people it identified in users' photos.