Not a fear of AI, a fear of how someone might use AI?
White House could force cloud companies to disclose AI customers
The White House is considering requiring cloud computing firms to report some information about their customers to the U.S. government, according to people familiar with an upcoming executive order on artificial intelligence.
The provision would direct the Commerce Department to write rules forcing cloud companies like Microsoft, Google, and Amazon to disclose when a customer purchases computing resources beyond a certain threshold. The order hasn’t been finalized and specifics of it could still change.
Similar “know-your-customer” policies already exist in the banking sector to prevent money laundering and other illegal activities, such as the law mandating firms to report cash transactions exceeding $10,000.
In this case, the rules are intended to create a system that would allow the U.S. government to identify potential AI threats ahead of time, particularly those coming from entities in foreign countries. If a company in the Middle East began building a powerful large language model using Amazon Web Services, for example, the reporting requirement would theoretically give American authorities an early warning about it.
The policy proposal represents a potential step toward treating computing power — or the technical capacity AI systems need to perform tasks — like a national resource. Mining Bitcoin, developing video games, and running AI models like ChatGPT all require large amounts of compute.
Perspective.
https://bigthink.com/the-well/mary-shelley-lessons-frankenstein-ai/
Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein can illuminate the debate over generative AI
… Shelley’s dystopian tale has managed to stay relevant since its publication. It has a riddling, Zen koan-like quality that has edified and entertained readers for centuries, inspiring a range of interpretations. Recently, it has been making appearances in the heated debates over generative artificial intelligence, where it often is evoked as a cautionary tale about the dangers of scientific overreach. Some worry that in pursuing technologies like AI, we are recklessly consigning our species to Victor Frankenstein’s tragic fate. Our wonderchildren, our miraculous machines, might ultimately destroy us. This fear is an expression of what science fiction writer Isaac Asimov once called the “Frankenstein complex,” a Luddite fear of robots.
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