Monday, June 12, 2023

Is AI a greater risk?

https://www.bespacific.com/generative-artificial-intelligence-and-data-privacy-a-primer/

Generative Artificial Intelligence and Data Privacy: A Primer

Congressional Research Service (CRS) – Generative Artificial Intelligence and Data Privacy. A Primer May 23, 2023: “Since the public release of Open AI’s ChatGPT, Google’s Bard, and other similar systems, some Members of Congress have expressed interest in the risks associated with “generative artificial intelligence (AI).” Although exact definitions vary, generative AI is a type of AI that can generate new content—such as text, images, and videos—through learning patterns from pre-existing data. It is a broad term that may include various technologies and techniques from AI and machine learning (ML). Generative AI models have received significant attention and scrutiny due to their potential harms, such as risks involving privacy, misinformation, copyright, and non-consensual sexual imagery. This report focuses on privacy issues and relevant policy considerations for Congress. Some policymakers and stakeholders have raised privacy concerns about how individual data may be used to develop and deploy generative models. These concerns are not new or unique to generative AI, but the scale, scope, and capacity of such technologies may present new privacy challenges for Congress.

See also CRS In Focus, June 9, 2023: Generative Artificial Intelligence: Overview, Issues, and Questions for Congress





Clear and simple. A diagram worth keeping?

https://www.barrons.com/news/the-three-types-of-machine-learning-algorithms-224da9b6

The Three Types Of Machine Learning Algorithms





Perspective.

https://thebulletin.org/2023/06/artificial-intelligence-challenges-and-controversies-for-us-national-security/

Artificial intelligence: challenges and controversies for US national security

An autonomous AI technology that equaled or surpassed human cognition could redefine how we understand both technology and humanity, but there is no surety as to whether or when such a “superintelligence” might emerge. Amid the uncertainty, the United States and other countries must consider the possible impact of AI on their armed forces and their preparedness for war fighting or deterrence. Military theorists, strategic planners, scientists and political leaders will face at least seven different challenges in anticipating the directions in which the interface between human and machine will move in the next few decades.



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