The republican proposal to prevent states from regulating artificial intelligence (AI) for 10 years is “too forceful,” wrote the executive director of Anthropic, Dario Amodei, in an opinion article of the New York Times.
Instead, Amodei urged the White House and Congress to collaborate in a transparency standard for AI companies at the federal level, so that emerging risks are evident to citizens.
“A 10 -year -old moratorium is a too forceful instrument. The AI ​​advances at a dizzying speed,” said Amodei.
“Without a clear federal response plan, a moratorium would bring us the worst of both worlds: states would not have the capacity to act and there would be no national policy that could support us.”
The proposal, included in the draft tax cuts by President Donald Trump, seeks to invalidate the laws and regulations of the recently approved in dozens of states, but generated opposition by a bipartisan group of general prosecutors that regulated the high -risk uses of this technology.
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Anthropic indicates that his AI, and that of others, is already sufficiently transparent with his operations
Instead, a national standard would require developers to work on powerful models that adopt policies to prove and evaluate their models, and publicly reveal how they plan to try and mitigate the risks for national security and other risks, indicates the Amodei opinion article.
If this policy was adopted, developers would also have to be transparent about the measures they took to guarantee the safety of their models before publishing them, he said.
Amodei indicated that Anthropic, backed by Amazon, already publishes this information, and that his OpenAi and Google Deepmind competitors adopted similar policies.
He argued that legislative incentives to ensure that these companies continue to disseminate these details could be necessary, since the corporate incentive to provide this level of transparency could change as the models become more powerful.
With Reuters information
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