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Trustworthy AI is also a work programme of the International Telecommunication Union, an agency of the United Nations, initiated under its AI for Good programme. [2] Its origin lies with the ITU-WHO Focus Group on Artificial Intelligence for Health, where strong need for privacy at the same time as the need for analytics, created a demand for a standard in these technologies.
The thesis that AI poses an existential risk, and that this risk needs much more attention than it currently gets, has been endorsed by many computer scientists and public figures, including Alan Turing, [a] the most-cited computer scientist Geoffrey Hinton, [123] Elon Musk, [12] OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, [13] [124] Bill Gates, and Stephen Hawking ...
As an alternative, some legal scholars argue that soft law approaches to AI regulation are promising because soft laws can be adapted more flexibly to meet the needs of emerging and evolving AI technology and nascent applications. [25] [26] However, soft law approaches often lack substantial enforcement potential. [25] [27]
The draft recognizes the rapid acceleration of AI development and use and stresses “the urgency of achieving global consensus on safe, secure and trustworthy artificial intelligence systems.”
Teens increasingly don’t trust the online content they consume, and AI is making it worse, according to a new study. A high school senior explains why that matters.
AI developers are doing more with smaller models requiring less computing power, while the potential harms of more widely used AI products won’t trigger California’s proposed scrutiny.
The order emphasizes the need to invest in AI applications, boost public trust in AI, reduce barriers for usage of AI, and keep American AI technology competitive in a global market. There is a nod to the need for privacy concerns, but no further detail on enforcement. The advances of American AI technology seems to be the focus and priority.
AI for Good is guided by Resolution 214 [17] of the ITU Plenipotentiary Conference, and amplified by Resolution A/78/L.49 of the UN General Assembly. [18] The adoption of Resolution COM4/AI at WTSA-24 [19] describes ITU's mandate and AI for Good's role in AI development. [non-primary source needed]