Balancing Innovation and Security in a Tech-Driven World
"...It will likely take an AI-related catastrophe before any international rulebook or organization begins regulating AI technologies..."
Greg's Words
I despise rules; not Natural rules. The man-made, legislative acts posed as 'protective' and oriented around 'safety' have devolved from logical to constrictive. Worse, the narratives behind laws, rules, regulations, and mandates have either become more transparent or simply more blatantly 'anti-fun' used to prop up old structures.
I bristle when I hear clamor about "how we need to slow down" AI development with guardrails and committees. For me, it is both too Early and too Late to control AI Evolution. The Genie is out of the bottle; the first of many more bottles to come.
But here's the fulcrum of my belief: If AI were going to make us extinct, it would have done so a long time ago.
The masses are mystified by today's ChatGPT. I stress the current version is a civilian edition. Would I be the only person who thinks what we are using today is a decade behind what DARPA and others have bubbled away in some underground lab somewhere?
I can't be.
All this panic talk about slowing things down is hogwash put forward by people who up until three months ago couldn't spell "AI" let alone put together a reasonable prompt.
No no, dear reader. The AI isn't going 'extinct' us. BUT - this isn't to say a bad actor isn't going to use AI to try. I'll let the military handle that one.
What is needed with AI is a body of folks who will craft reasonable rules of engagement and policies designed to accelerate innovation AND illuminate all the possibilities of AI.
We don't need more laws.
Check out this summary of this article.
Executive Summary:
- As AI technologies become increasingly integral and potentially harmful, leading voices within the field argue that regulation of these technologies should be a global priority.
- Despite industry support for AI regulation, tangible action has yet to be taken by policymakers, who remain more focused on other pressing issues such as limiting China's access to critical resources and establishing shared terminology around AI risks.
- Significant challenges lie ahead in navigating global regulations, with current models unable to keep pace with the rapid evolution of AI. Advocates suggest that companies should preemptively adopt potential regulations and safety standards, ideally leading to broader global implementation.
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