Tech Titans Meet With Senators on AI

Andrew Thornebrooke
By Andrew Thornebrooke
September 13, 2023Congress
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Members of Congress are leaving a high-profile closed-door forum on artificial intelligence (AI) with little hope of crafting meaningful legislation to protect Americans in the next year.

Senate majority leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) convened the closed hearing with a veritable who’s who of tech’s rich and famous, including Microsoft founder Bill Gates, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, X chairman Elon Musk, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, and Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai.

The Sept. 13 AI Insight Forum, Mr. Schumer said, was designed to inform Congress as to how it can best move forward in setting safeguards for the development of AI.

Many present, however, claimed that the meeting presented little to no real progress on the development of legislation.

Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.) noted that the forum heard from 30 speakers, each with only three minutes to talk. As to meaningful policy proposals, he added, there wasn’t much to speak of.

“In terms of regulatory suggestions, I didn’t hear much,” Mr. Kennedy told The Epoch Times.

“Do we have some sort of overarching regulatory framework that we’re close to agreeing on that addresses the dangers and the potential of artificial intelligence, in my judgment? No. We just don’t right now.”

Mr. Kennedy said that Congress has gone seven years without passing any meaningful bills to protect Americans’ privacy on social media or move forward on antitrust legislation despite apparent bipartisan consensus. Asked if he believed Congress could craft meaningful legislation to govern AI in the near future, his answer was grim and simple.

“No.”

“I think the way most senators feel about artificial intelligence is that it has extraordinary potential to make our lives better if it doesn’t make our lives worse first.”

Forum Criticized for Offering No Real Progress on AI

A key point of contention among those leaving the forum was Mr. Schumer’s making sweeping promises that the media frenzy would help to promote some sort of legislative progress concerning AI regulation.

Mr. Schumer previously vowed that such forums would be a vital avenue for forming a legislative framework to contend with the “revolution” of AI.

Leaving the forum, however, Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) said he doubted Mr. Schumer’s sincerity in seeking solutions to protect the American public from AI.

“It’s a little bit like with antitrust the last two years,” Mr. Hawley said. “He talks about it constantly and does nothing about it. You’ll see. My sense is [that] a big part of what this is is a lot of song and dance that covers the fact that actually nothing is advancing.”

Mr. Hawley’s reference was to a series of vows made by Mr. Schumer over the course of a number of years to bring antitrust legislation to Congress to limit the scope of mammoth tech corporations. After postponing such legislation time and again, however, Mr. Schumer in January refused to bring the written legislation to the Senate floor, claiming it would not receive enough votes to pass.

Some have questioned Mr. Schumer’s assertion and also raised issues with the long-time senator’s deep ties to the tech companies in question. In total, more than 80 of Mr. Schumer’s former staffers now work for major tech corporations. Likewise, both of Mr. Schumer’s daughters work for major tech corporations that would be directly affected by such legislation, one as a marketing manager for Meta and one as a lobbyist for Amazon.

To that end, Mr. Hawley also said the CEOs who were present claimed to be in favor of very vague regulations but would balk when presented with firm demands from the state.

“I’m really worried that this is the same song, second verse,” Hawley said.

“Soon, we’ll hear: ‘Well, we need to go really slow. Well, we can’t really agree well. Let’s study it. And then, five years from now, it’ll be a bonanza where all of the money will be going to these companies, and we’ll be losing jobs.”

Congressional Delay on AI Linked to Erosion of Privacy, Civil Rights

The forum comes amid a series of high-profile congressional hearings on the issue of AI.

Lawmakers are grappling with how to mitigate the dangers of the emerging technology, which has experienced a boom in investment in recent years.

During one such Senate subcommittee hearing in May, Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) described the current state of AI development as a “bomb in a china shop.” The “looming new industrial revolution,” he said, could well displace millions of American workers and dramatically undermine public safety and trust in key institutions.

Despite that concern, OpenAI’s Mr. Altman insisted that “the benefits of [AI] vastly outweigh the risks.”

The forum also comes just one day after a Senate subcommittee which received expert testimony that government inaction and weak regulations governing AI development are directly harming the American public while profiting major tech corporations.

Woodrow Hartzog, a professor of law at Boston University, said that “half measures” like audits and controls that are implemented after AI systems have already been deployed are putting the safety of American citizens at risk.

“To bring AI within the rule of law, lawmakers must go beyond half measures to ensure that AI systems and the actors that deploy them are worthy of our trust,” Mr. Hartzog said during a Sept. 12 Senate Judiciary subcommittee hearing on the issue of AI regulation.

To that end, Mr. Hartzog said that tech corporations are diluting consumer protection laws by fortifying their own preferred practices within a web of oversight rules and bureaucracy.

Whatever the future of congressional AI regulation, Mr. Blumenthal told The Epoch Times that Congress shared in bipartisan support to address the issue.

“I think that this topic has already elicited bipartisan interest… and has bipartisan support,” Mr. Blumenthal said. “Senator Hawley and I may differ on a lot, but we are strongly united [on this].”

Iris Tao and Joseph Lord contributed to this report.

From The Epoch Times

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