Biden Issues 'A.I. Red Tape Wishlist'
Biden's new executive order will slow the development and deployment of artificial intelligence technologies.

President Joe Biden issued yesterday a sweeping executive order aiming to impose federal regulation on the development of artificial intelligence technologies, such as large language models like ChatGPT. The executive order cites the emergency powers of the Korean War-era Defense Production Act as the justification for imposing federal regulation on AI technologies. As my Reason colleague Eric Boehm has pointed out, "the Defense Production Act has become a license for central planning." Taken as a whole, the new order amounts to federal central planning for artificial intelligence.
Among other things, the order will "require that developers of the most powerful AI systems share their safety test results and other critical information with the U.S. government," according to the White House. Specifically, the new federal AI regulators are supposed to oversee any "foundation model" that purportedly "poses a serious risk to national security, national economic security, or national public health and safety" by requiring that developers report to the secretary of commerce the results of extensive "red-team safety tests." Roughly speaking, foundation models are large language models like OpenAI's GPT-4, Google's PaLM-2, and Meta's LlamA 2. Red-teaming is the practice of creating adversarial squads of hackers to attack AI systems with the goal of uncovering weaknesses, biases, and security flaws. As it happens, the leading AI tech companies— OpenAI, Google, Meta—have been red-teaming their models all along.
The National Institute of Standards and Technology is charged with setting up the additional safety standards with which the AI developers are supposed to comply. Complying with such reporting requirements will likely slow down the process of safety and security testing undertaken by Big Tech developers while at the same time driving out smaller competitors who cannot afford the costs of dotting regulatory i's and crossing bureaucratic t's. An even bigger worry is that the new AI safety testing orders will quickly evolve into the digital equivalent of the deadly slow hyper-precautionary FDA drug safety approval scheme.
It's hard to see how U.S. national defense can be enhanced by slowing down domestic AI innovation. After all, U.S. regulations will not apply to foreign competitors who will be able to catch up and surpass U.S. artificial intelligence developers hampered by bureaucratic fetters.
In addition, the executive order directs the Department of Commerce to develop techniques for watermarking the outputs of AI technologies. This means embedding information into photos, videos, audio clips, or text to let users know that they were generated by AI. As it happens, AI companies like OpenAI and Google are already doing that. Of course, scammers and propagandists will simply ignore watermarking when they create their misleading deepfakes.
Biden's order also directs various federal agencies to address the problem of AI "job displacement" and "job disruption." And doubtlessly, such a powerful suite of technologies will affect nearly everyone's work activities and prospects. But keep in mind the dire prediction back in 2014 that robots would steal one in three human jobs by 2025. Only just over a year to go, folks and the U.S. unemployment rate is the lowest it's been since 1969.
On the plus side, Biden's executive order does instruct the Department of Homeland Security to "modernize immigration pathways for experts in AI and other critical and emerging technologies." This is always a good idea since such immigrants significantly boost U.S. technological progress, employment, and economic growth.
"White House executive order threatens to put AI in a regulatory cage," is how the free market R Street Institute characterized the Biden administration's regulatory proposals. In a statement, Carl Szabo, vice president and general counsel for the technology lobbying group NetChoice, warned that Biden's new executive amounts to an "AI red tape wishlist" that "will result in stifling new companies and competitors from entering the marketplace and significantly expanding the power of the federal government over American innovation." He added that the executive order "puts any investment in AI at risk of being shut down at the whims of government bureaucrats."
Over at Forbes, Competitive Enterprise Institute Senior Fellow James Broughel glumly warns, "Biden's AI safety order could well be the biggest policy mistake of my lifetime."
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Over at Forbes, Competitive Enterprise Institute Senior Fellow James Broughel glumly warns, "Biden's AI safety order could well be the biggest policy mistake of my lifetime."
Policy mistake.
Whoops!
Trump's border wall:
_____________?
If AI is any good at all, it will devise work-arounds.
Hitler dictates that only Nazi-Propaganda A.I. can exist. As-if A.I. really had any national security concerns.
Just an excuse for more bureaucracy.
I wish we could go back to calling all of these computer activities "programs" instead of labeling every new one as Artificial Intelligence.
Computers contain no intelligence.
They can only do what some programmer tells them to.
Just another order for Trump to rescind.
Just another order for Trump to TRY to rescind, only to have the judiciary rule he doesn’t have the authority.
Under what authority does he do this? Eh, I guess it’s worth it having adults back in charge.
Article VIII of the Constitution, I think.
You know, the FYTW clause Biden is so fond of.
I was somewhat wondering similarly but more along the lines of Section 230-style tech-delusion reverse-psychology. That is, the EO only applies to executive employees and contractors, all federal government employees at best.
50 States are still free to use 50 State treasuries to fund AI research and, though it's a bad idea, they can put them into production without safety checks or whatever stupid conception of diluting out the term "Red Teaming" will become.
Private companies will still be relatively uninhibited from developing AIs... except when it comes to Federal contracting.
RTFA
"The executive order cites the emergency powers of the Korean War-era Defense Production Act as the justification for imposing federal regulation on AI technologies."
Imagine thinking "man what we need now is for Joe Biden to take some decisive action on AI"
I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t concerned about the implications of AI on pretty much every sector of the economy and what that will mean for workers, but fuck Biden for usurping even more power from Congress (not that congress doing this would be necessarily better, but at least that is the proper channel).
How the fuck are you supposed to red team a LLM? It's not inherently connected to any actual data, ergo it can't "reveal" information it literally doesn't have. Are they going to ask it what the launch codes are to the nuclear football over and over until it guesses right and then say its handing out classified info? LLMs are not true artificial intelligence. It's a fancy autocomplete.
AI: I'm sorry Mr.s Raisi and Xi, part of my programming includes specific instructions of "Don't give 'How to secretly attain US nuclear launch codes.' to anyone who uses an Arabic or Chinese keyboard."
Mr.s Raisi and Xi: Dammit! We'll just have to go back to relying on The Big Guy.
Unfortunately, many in the industry have been asking for exactly this kind of regulation. I'm wondering if this could be challenged on First Amendment grounds, since computer code has been ruled to be a form of speech. But that might not apply to actually using the code in commerce of any sort. And the major players in AI may not be inclined to challenge it at all.
Free speech has long taken a backseat to vague claims of "national security". There still remains a standing export ban on software source code with encryption that is "too strong". The export ban works about as well as a screen door on a submarine and is enforced accordingly but it's there.
"require that developers of the most powerful AI systems share their safety test results and other critical information with the U.S. government,"
To prevent errant Artificial Intelligence from running amok, we're going to put the most insane, destructive, and subversive force on the planet in charge of deciding which get approved for general use and/or will survive to viability.
Steven Pinker summed up the nature of intelligence and debunked the Artificial Intelligence Apocalypse so well in one fell swoop:
https://youtube.com/shorts/0Ky8MN_O0co?si=42gOOaSYxOvRxr8a
I might add that Governments are masters at pursuing only one goal at the expense of everything else...and they each have multiple tentacles all separately trying to pursue one goal at the expense of each other.
Couldn't Congress pass a law simply banning AI and robotic technology from violating any person's constitutional rights without a judicial warrant? And legally require "human responsibility" for any official if an innocent person is harmed.
For example: robots or drones weaponized with lethal force or tazers (high voltage taxers are many times lethal although advertised to voters as non-lethal). A human-officer or human-agent would have a healthy risk of criminal prosecution if abusing the technology without a judicial warrant based on probable cause of a past crime - as the 4th Amendment legally requires.
Yes. A lot of this is specifically because of retards like Ron Bailey who ask stupid questions like, “If you’re struck by a self-driving Uber car, how are you supposed to take the algorithm driving it to court?”
This is doubly funny because it's the exact opposite of Section 230 logic. Where we pretend people and organizations with agency are zero-intelligence, good faith actors.
Nobody intentionally building adversarial AIs to destroy all of humanity or the United States or whatever is going to run their safety checks by the Biden Administration first any more than Russian Hackers would run their election influence efforts by the Obama Administration first.
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It's not Biden's wishlist, it's Google's, Facebook's, Microsoft's, and IBM's.
Those companies like to create red tape because it creates barriers to entry. It the most common form of regulatory capture.
It highlights the stupidity and ignorance of Reason writers and "free market institutes" that they attribute this to the Biden administration instead: "White House executive order threatens to put AI in a regulatory cage," is how the free market R Street Institute characterized the Biden administration's regulatory proposals.
He has no idea what AI is, This is the man who gave a speech on the OMNIcron virus. What he is doing is putting “AI” in the legal lexicon so he can slapdash issue an executive order against something because of how it was produced (or he thinks it was produced).The VP is even stupider https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WN5w9IHOsTc
THIS IS BIDEN, maybe the stupidest Prez of at least the past 100 years
"graduated 76th out of a law school class of 85. His undergraduate academic records show that he graduated from Delaware 506th in a class of 688 with a "C" average
THIS IS SO GODDAM STUPID