Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, said that ``AI regulation is essential'', and at the public hearing, ChatGPT created a bill and surprised parliamentarians



Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, who developed chatGPT for interactive AI, attended a public hearing held in the United States and stated that the future policy for AI was ``While extending the benefits, minimizing the harm of AI. Government intervention will be important,' he said.

Oversight of AI: Rules for Artificial ... | United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary

https://www.judiciary.senate.gov/committee-activity/hearings/oversight-of-ai-rules-for-artificial-intelligence

WATCH LIVE: OpenAI CEO Sam Altman tests on artificial intelligence before Senate committee-YouTube


Sam Altman wows lawmakers at closed AI dinner: 'Fantastic…forthcoming'
https://www.cnbc.com/2023/05/16/openai-ceo-woos-lawmakers-ahead-of-first-testimony-before-congress.html

OpenAI CEO embraces government regulation in Senate hearing
https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/tech-news/openai-ceo-embraces-government-regulation-senate-hearing-rcna83931

OpenAI boss tells congress he fears AI is harming the world | Evening Standard
https://www.standard.co.uk/tech/openai-sam-altman-us-congress-ai-harm-chatgpt-b1081528.html

Altman, who gave a two-hour speech at a hearing held by the Senate Judiciary Committee, proposed setting safety standards for AI, establishing tests to be conducted before AI is released to the public, and conducting pre-release inspections by independent auditors. “We believe government regulatory intervention will be important to mitigate the risks of increasingly powerful AI models,” he said.

When Republican Senator Josh Hawley said, ``People may use AI as a reliable source of information,'' Altman said, ``The government can play a role in regulating this technology. I think it's wise,' he said. ``People need to know whether the content they are looking at is generated by AI or not,'' he reiterated the importance of regulatory supervision of AI by the government.



In the United States ahead of the presidential election in 2024, there are concerns about the spread of misinformation created by humans using AI, but Mr. Altman expressed concern about this, saying, ``Once Photoshop appeared, People were fooled by the Photoshopped images for a while, but gradually they came to understand that the images were processed in Photoshop.It's the same with AI, ''said AI The general public will learn to adapt to the threats posed to information and media.

Regarding AI regulations, existing frameworks such as Article 230 of the Communications Decency Act, which exempts platforms from responsibility for content posted by users, are inappropriate and not a method that can properly regulate systems, but a completely new framework. should be established, argued Mr. Altman.



``We believe the benefits of the tools OpenAI has deployed so far greatly outweigh the risks,'' Altman said. AI technology will have a big impact on the job market, but there are much bigger jobs beyond the impact, and tools like GPT-4 can fully automate some jobs and do better jobs. I think it will create new jobs,' he said.

Mr. Gary Marcus, Professor Emeritus of New York University, who took the stage following Mr. Altman, said that ``hyper-targeting of advertisements'' that utilizes the vast amount of personal information held by companies and transmits information tailored to individual tastes will be performed. I argue that the time is definitely coming. Mr. Marcus expressed his view on AI regulation, ``It is recommended to quickly build an international organization.''

It should be noted that this hearing was held in a milder atmosphere than the lectures of

TikTok and Facebook CEOs, where lawmakers sometimes raised their voices. Altman reportedly surprised many lawmakers with a demonstration of having ChatGPT write a bill.



in Software, Posted by log1p_kr