With artificial intelligence at a pivotal moment of development, the federal government is about to transition from one that prioritized AI safeguards to one more focused on eliminating red tape.
That’s a promising prospect for some investors but creates uncertainty about the future of any guardrails on the technology, especially around the use of AI deepfakes in elections and political campaigns.
President-elect Donald Trump has pledged to rescind President Joe Biden’s sweeping AI executive order, which sought to protect people’s rights and safety without stifling innovation. He hasn’t specified what he would do in its place, but the platform of the Republican National Committee, which he recently reshaped, said AI development should be “rooted in Free Speech and Human Flourishing.”
It’s an open question whether Congress, soon to be fully controlled by Republicans, will be interested in passing any AI-related legislation. Interviews with a dozen lawmakers and industry experts reveal there is still interest in boosting the technology’s use in national security and cracking down on non-consensual explicit images.
Yet the use of AI in elections and in spreading misinformation is likely to take a backseat as GOP lawmakers turn away from anything they view as potentially suppressing innovation or free speech.
“AI has incredible potential to enhance human productivity and positively benefit our economy,” said U.S. Rep. Jay Obernolte, a California Republican widely seen as a leader in the evolving technology. “We need to strike an appropriate balance between putting in place the framework to prevent the harmful things from happening while at the same time enabling innovation.”
Artificial intelligence interests have been expecting sweeping federal legislation for years. But Congress, gridlocked on nearly every issue, failed to pass any artificial intelligence bill, instead producing only a series of proposals and reports.
“I find there are Republicans that are very interested in this topic,” said Democratic U.S. Sen. Gary Peters, singling out national security as one area of potential agreement. “I am confident I will be able to work with them as I have in the past.”
It’s still unclear how much Republicans want the federal government to intervene in AI development. Few showed interest before this year’s election in regulating how the Federal Election Commission or the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) handled AI-generated content, worrying that it would raise First Amendment issues at the same time that Trump’s campaign and other Republicans were using the technology to create political memes.
The FCC was in the middle of a lengthy process for developing AI-related regulations when Trump won the presidency. That work has since been halted under long-established rules covering a change in administrations.
Trump has expressed both interest and skepticism in artificial intelligence.
During a Fox Business interview earlier this year, he called the technology “very dangerous” and “so scary” because “there’s no real solution.” But his campaign and supporters also embraced AI-generated images more than their Democratic opponents. They often used them in social media posts that weren’t meant to mislead, but rather to further entrench Republican political views.
Elon Musk, Trump’s close adviser and a founder of several companies that rely on AI, also has shown a mix of concern and excitement about the technology, depending on how it is applied.
Musk used X, the social media platform he owns, to promote AI-generated images and videos throughout the election. Operatives from Americans for Responsible Innovation, a nonprofit focused on artificial intelligence, have publicly been pushing Trump to tap Musk as his top adviser on the technology.
“We think that Elon has a pretty sophisticated understating of both the opportunities and risks of advanced AI systems,” said Doug Calidas, a top operative from the group.
But Musk advising Trump on artificial intelligence worries others. Peters argued it could undercut the president.
“It is a concern,” said the Michigan Democrat. “Whenever you have anybody that has a strong financial interest in a particular technology, you should take their advice and counsel with a grain of salt.”
In the run-up to the election, many AI experts expressed concern about an eleventh-hour deepfake — a lifelike AI image, video or audio clip — that would sway or confuse voters as they headed to the polls. While those fears were never realized, AI still played a role in the election, said Vivian Schiller, Executive Director of Aspen Digital, part of the nonpartisan Aspen Institute think tank.
“I would not use the term that I hear a lot of people using, which is it was the dog that didn’t bark,” she said of AI in the 2024 election. “It was there, just not in the way that we expected.”
Campaigns used AI in algorithms to target messages to voters. AI-generated memes, though not lifelike enough to be mistaken as real, felt true enough to deepen partisan divisions.
A political consultant mimicked Biden’s voice in robocalls that could have dissuaded voters from coming to the polls during New Hampshire’s primary if they hadn’t been caught quickly. And foreign actors used AI tools to create and automate fake online profiles and websites that spread disinformation to a U.S. audience.
Even if AI didn’t ultimately influence the election outcome, the technology made political inroads and contributed to an environment where U.S. voters don’t feel confident that what they are seeing is true. That dynamic is part of the reason some in the AI industry want to see regulations that establish guidelines.
“President Trump and people on his team have said they don’t want to stifle the technology and they do want to support its development, so that is welcome news,” said Craig Albright, the top lobbyist and senior vice president at The Software Alliance, a trade group whose members include OpenAI, Oracle and IBM. “It is our view that passing national laws to set the rules of the road will be good for developing markets for the technology.”
AI safety advocates during a recent meeting in San Francisco made similar arguments, according to Suresh Venkatasubramanian, director of the Center for Tech Responsibility at Brown University.
“By putting literal guardrails, lanes, road rules, we were able to get cars that could roll a lot faster,” said Venkatasubramanian, a former Biden administration official who helped craft White House principles for approaching AI.
Rob Weissman, co-president of the advocacy group Public Citizen, said he’s not hopeful about the prospects for federal legislation and is concerned about Trump’s pledge to rescind Biden’s executive order, which created an initial set of national standards for the industry. His group has advocated for federal regulation of generative AI in elections.
“The safeguards are themselves ways to promote innovation so that we have AI that’s useful and safe and doesn’t exclude people and promotes the technology in ways that serve the public interest,” he said.
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Republished with permission of The Associated Press.
3 comments
Paul Passarelli
November 29, 2024 at 2:47 pm
AP wrote: “the federal government is about to transition from one that prioritized AI safeguards to one more focused on eliminating red tape.”
Which is a truism. Its also entirely misses the point. There is less than zero ability of the Federal Government to regulate AI, and the absurdity that even its human creators possess the knowledge to ‘impose’ safeguards no matter where their priorities lie is laughable!
Sorry to be the bearer of doom & gloom. But the notion is about as plausible as the government passing a regulation that trees shall not drop their leaves in the fall. Or the plankton shall not bloom in the warm offshore waters.
We can can reasonably rely on the chance that AI does not adopt predatory instincts and therefore does not perceive humanity as a material threat. But if it does, we don’t stand a chance of besting it. Therefore, any pretense of pretending to safeguard AI development is not only a lie, it’s a transparently bad lie as well.
In a few years the combination of AI & humaniform robots will slash the incremental price of labor to zero. There’s nothing the government can do to stop it. It’s this generations telephone, steam shovel, assembly line, interstate, suburbs, computer revolution, information superhighway, augmented reality, etc.
People will *DEMAND* the AI robots that will render themselves obsolete. Because it’s the latest fad. Nothing can change that. nothing is going to stop it.
Therefore posturing on what an administration that couldn’t even control basic problems or stop telemarketers to save us from an AI army… Pfft! Ridiculous.
At lest the Trump administrations plans will allow for the Free Market to develop natural competition for the AIs leading to a survival of the fittest. We simply have to reinforce that the fitness test in the AI’s best interest, is the one that’s in our best interests as well. No Democrat policy, just like no Soviet Era policy has ever achieved that goal.
A definition of insanity is repeating the same action over & over again hoping for a different outcome. Hoping that some dumb-ass Democrat inspired policy is going to be beneficial is an example of that insanity.
Earl Pitts American
November 29, 2024 at 3:07 pm
Good afternoon Sage Patriots & Dook 4 Brains Leftys,
You may all Relax Your Sphincters over this entire “AI” conumdrum.
Thats right:
See what most folks dont know is AI never was a real thing. AI was a hoax from day one as its intent was to say wise “Presidental” things while all Biden had to do was lip sync. Turns out the lip sync was too much for his dementa to pull off.
IN CLOSING:
I, Earl Pitts American, hope none of you readers invested in AI, as the Govornment is getting ready to “Shut AI Down”.
Your welcome America,
Earl Pitts American
RSLewis
November 30, 2024 at 1:23 am
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