socialist value
AI's threat to humanity will be far greater if China masters it first: Gordon Chang
Chinese proposals mandating AI reinforce socialist values and viewpoints make the technology more dangerous to humanity, China researcher Gordon Chang says. Chinese Communist Party socialist values reinforced through artificial intelligence are a threat to humanity, but the country's restrictions on the technology may also hamper its development, China expert Gordon Chang told Fox News. "Artificial intelligence poses a direct threat to humanity, but it'll become even more a threat to humanity if China masters it before we do," said Chang. "We see this, for instance, in the gene editing of humans." The Cyberspace Administration of China recently proposed AI measures to ensure the technology supports socialist values.
China will require AI to reflect socialist values, not challenge social order
China on Tuesday revealed its proposed assessment measures for prospective generative artificial intelligence (AI) tools, telling companies they must submit their products before launching to the public. The Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) proposed the measures in order to prevent discriminatory content, false information and content with the potential to harm personal privacy or intellectual property, the South China Morning Press reported. Such measures would ensure that the products do not end up suggesting regime subversion or disrupting economic or social order, according to the CAC. A number of Chinese companies, including Baidu, SenseTime and Alibaba, have recently shown of new AI models to power a number of applications from chatbots to image generators, prompting concern from officials over the impending boom in use. The CAC also stressed that the products must align with the country's core socialist values, Reuters reported.
China will require AI to reflect socialist values, not challenge social order
Fox News correspondent Matt Finn has the latest on the impact of AI technology that some say could outpace humans on'Special Report.' China on Tuesday revealed its proposed assessment measures for prospective generative artificial intelligence (AI) tools, telling companies they must submit their products before launching to the public. The Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) proposed the measures in order to prevent discriminatory content, false information and content with the potential to harm personal privacy or intellectual property, the South China Morning Press reported. Such measures would ensure that the products do not end up suggesting regime subversion or disrupting economic or social order, according to the CAC. A number of Chinese companies, including Baidu, SenseTime and Alibaba, have recently shown of new AI models to power a number of applications from chatbots to image generators, prompting concern from officials over the impending boom in use.
China's New Video Game Restrictions Are About Far More Than Kids' Habits
China has twice as many gamers as the U.S. has people--some 700 million of them. That ubiquity, especially among young people, has worried China's central government. So at the start of this month, it banned people under 18 from playing video games for more than three hours a week. They could only play from 8 to 9 p.m. on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday nights. The government has gone after tutoring companies and big tech players in this "season of crackdowns," in an attempt to bring these sectors more in line with what they perceive as socialist values and to strengthen control over Chinese society and the Chinese economy.