{"id":2975,"date":"2023-05-08T11:35:45","date_gmt":"2023-05-08T11:35:45","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/promptmuse.com\/?p=2975"},"modified":"2023-05-08T11:35:45","modified_gmt":"2023-05-08T11:35:45","slug":"a-new-era-of-ai-governance-the-white-house-leads-the-way-in-promoting-ai-ethics-and-inclusivity","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/promptmuse.com\/a-new-era-of-ai-governance-the-white-house-leads-the-way-in-promoting-ai-ethics-and-inclusivity\/","title":{"rendered":"A New Era of AI Governance: The White House Leads the Way in Promoting AI Ethics and Inclusivity"},"content":{"rendered":"
On Thursday, President Joe Biden held a meeting<\/a> at the White House with CEOs of leading AI companies, including Google, Microsoft, OpenAI, and Anthropic. The meeting emphasized the importance of ensuring the safety of AI products before deployment and addressing the risks posed by AI. However, some AI experts criticized the exclusion of ethics researchers who have warned of AI’s dangers for years. Critics of the companies’ ethical track records<\/a> were not impressed by the meeting. They questioned the choice<\/a> of inviting people to the meeting who, they argue, represent companies that have created the issues with AI that the White House seeks to address. University of Oxford AI ethics researcher Elizabeth Renieris tweeted<\/a>, “Unfortunately, and with all due respect POTUS, these are not the people who can tell us what is “most needed to protect society” when it comes to #AI.”<\/p>\n
\nOver the past few months, generative AI models such as ChatGPT have quickly gained popularity<\/a>, driving companies to develop similar products rapidly. However, concerns have been growing about potential privacy issues<\/a>, employment bias, and the potential for using them to create misinformation campaigns<\/a>.<\/p>\nAI Ethics Researchers Respond<\/h2>\n
\nOn Twitter, AI researcher Dr. Timnit Gebru wrote<\/a>, “It seems like we spend half our time talking to various legislators and agencies and STILL we have this… A room full of the dudes who gave us the issues & fired us for talking about the risks, being called on by the damn president to ‘protect people\u2019s rights.'” In 2020, Google fired Gebru following a dispute over a research paper she co-authored that highlighted potential risks and biases in large-scale language models.<\/p>\nAI Safety and AI Ethics<\/h2>\n