Downplaying AI’s existential risks is a fatal error, some say
Mitt Romney, R-Utah, said in an interview. "And that’s something we’d like to see happen." Romney joined Sens.
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Mitt Romney, R-Utah, said in an interview. "And that’s something we’d like to see happen." Romney joined Sens.
Schumer said the Senate group knew from the outset that its work was meant to "supplement, not supplant" the work of the committees, adding that he hoped they would "lay down a base of bipartisan policy
tech industry to thrive, Moore said in an interview.
"All of the media layoffs we’ve seen are the result of massive transitions in the business model of media.
said in an interview.
"If you think [deceptive ads are] a problem then it would make sense to address it, whether it’s created by AI or not," Cohn said in an interview.
John Hickenlooper, D-Colo., said in an interview. "We have got to know who owns what data and that the use of data is not harmful."
Alberto Pena Fernandez, head of the ECAT unit, said in an interview in his office in Brussels. "We are doing a systematic analysis of what the algorithm is doing."
A 2020 version of the bill, called the AI in Government Act, passed the House but not the Senate.