The Volokh Conspiracy

Mostly law professors | Sometimes contrarian | Often libertarian | Always independent

What makes AI safe?

Episode 452 of the Cyberlaw Podcast

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In this episode, we dive into some of the AI safety reports that have been issued in recent weeks. Jeffery Atik first takes us through the basics of attention-based AI, and then into reports on AI safety from OpenAI and Stanford. Exactly what AI safety covers remains opaque (and toxic, in my view, after the ideological purges committed in the name of "trust and safety" by Silicon Valley's content suppression bureaucracies). But there's no doubt that a potential existential issue lurks below the surface of the most ambitious AI projects.

Whether or not ChatGPT's stochastic parroting will ever pose a threat to humanity, Nick Weaver reports, it clearly poses a threat to a lot of people's reputations.

I confess that there's surprisingly little cyberlaw in the biggest intel leak of the last decade. It turns out that leakers can do as much damage as cyberspies, just by folding, carrying, and photographing classified documents. While there's some evidence that the Russian government may have piggybacked on the leak to sow disinformation, Nick says, the real puzzle is the leaker's motivation. That leads us to the question whether being a griefer is grounds for losing your clearance.

Paul Rosenzweig educates us about the Restricting the Emergence of Security Threats that Risk Information and Communications Technology (RESTRICT) Act, which would empower the administration to limit or ban TikTok. He highlights the most prominent argument against the bill, which is, no surprise, the discretion the act would confer on the executive branch. The bill's authors, Sen. Mark Warner (D-VA) and Sen. John Thune (R-SD), have responded to this criticism, but it looks as though they'll be offering substantive limits on executive discretion only in the heat of Congressional action.

Nick is impressed by the law enforcement operation that shuttered Genesis Market, where credentials were widely sold to hackers. The data seized by the FBI in the operation will pay dividends for years.

I give a warning to anyone who has left a sensitive intelligence job to work in the private sector: If your new employer has ties to a foreign government, the Director of National Intelligence has issued a new directive that (sort of) puts you on notice that you could be violating federal law. The directive has detailed provisions for how the intelligence community will tell its current employees about the new post-employment restrictions, but it offers very little guidance to intelligence community alumni who have already moved to the private sector.

Nick is enthusiastic about the tough tone taken by the Treasury in its report on the illicit finance risk in decentralized finance.

Paul and I cover Utah's bill requiring teens to get parental approval to join social media sites. After twenty years of mocking red states and their Congressional delegations for trying to control the internet's impact on kids, it looks to me as though Knowledge Class parents are getting worried about their own children. When the idea of age-checking internet users gets endorsed by the UK, Utah, and The New Yorker, I suggest, those arguing against the proposal may have a tougher time than they did in the 90s.

And in quick hits:

Download 452nd Episode (mp3)

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