Bureaucrats shouldn't impose global AI policy at 'fancy, high-level' meetings, expert warns

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Bureaucrats shouldn't impose global AI policy at 'fancy, high-level' meetings, expert warns
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The U.S. already aligned roughly 50 countries, including Russia and China, behind an artificial intelligence development principles agreement in 2019 under the OECD.

Marc Rotenberg of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, speaks during a voters rights forum hosted by the Congressional Black Caucus and House Judiciary Committee Democrats in the Rayburn House Office Building July 18, 2017, in Washington, D.C.

Rotenberg said he found the voluntary conduct codes frustrating because the U.S. is already part of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and DevelopmentThe U.S. even gathered support from countries around the world, including China, Russia and Brazil. The OECD principles established a governmental standard on AI in 2019, which served as the basis for the G-20 AI Principles established in the same year.

Rotenberg voiced concerns that the policymakers and lawmakers"are not sufficiently familiar with what’s happened previously." As of 2021, Rotenberg said he could count some 800 different codes of conduct for AI, with companies — including Google, Microsoft and other AI developers — establishing internal conduct codes. "We were focusing on establishing the necessary. There's widespread support. It's truly nonpartisan at this point, and it's also global.

One of the issues around AI guardrail policy comes from the varying levels of development in different countries. Europe, for example, has an AI app"near the finish line" that researchers have worked on for three years, according to Rotenberg, while China is"much farther along" in"Most U.S. policymakers see thein terms of innovation and market dominance. That competition is real, there's no doubt about it," Rotenberg said.

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