Major tech firms have opted to come together and unite for a formal pledge that revolves around advancements to AI development safety.
The news broke out during a recently held global meeting on virtual grounds where leaders from the United Kingdom and South Korea as well as reps from all tech giants took part with one goal in mind. And that was related to more transparency and better oversights for work.
A total of 16 different firms acknowledged the major benefits that AI brings and the massive risks that come about if it gets misused or ends up harming individuals.
A list of practical steps were promoted such as a host of publishing frameworks linked to safety and even avoiding models that came with massive risks. This combined with coordination from regulators on a global scale meant a better means to tackle the problem.
See, the goal right now appears to be related to making sure AI systems function in an ethical manner and give rise to zero harm as the tech world evolves.
Other than the Western world of tech firms, companies arising from China and even the Arab World were said to have taken part in this pledge. Common names include Samsung, Xiaomi, and Tencent.
In this manner, researchers would be evaluating systems for all sorts of biases and issues that put others at a serious disadvantage. The intention seems to be linked to proper monitoring of AI models to attain all sorts of perspectives regarding risks having to do with deployment.
Meanwhile, leaders from several other countries like America and the EU have shown positive remarks for the initiative and hope more meetings on this front can be held to ascertain the mighty risks attached.
Many political leaders feel this is a great start and with time, more regulation would be required. It’s a major step taken by OpenAI and it’s been getting a lot of attention as the company’s own AI safety team was disbanded last week. Today, no superalignment team exists that has to do with ensuring AI acts are rolled out safely.
The report arises after two top members from the AI giant left the organization as they felt the leadership at OpenAI was more keen on putting other things as top priority while sidelining safety.
And due to the fact that safety is not being taken as seriously as it should, they sent in their resignations on this front. As expected, this left the world questioning OpenAI’s stance and what it was doing.
Sam Altman and his executives rushed into the picture and generated responses linked to concerns that many were having. They reassured the general public about the firm’s commitment to carrying out rigorous tests and took into careful consideration as well as a host of security measures that were simply world-class.
Image: DIW-Aigen
Read next: Global Tax Analysis: Comparing Nations with the Highest and Lowest Corporate Taxation
The news broke out during a recently held global meeting on virtual grounds where leaders from the United Kingdom and South Korea as well as reps from all tech giants took part with one goal in mind. And that was related to more transparency and better oversights for work.
A total of 16 different firms acknowledged the major benefits that AI brings and the massive risks that come about if it gets misused or ends up harming individuals.
A list of practical steps were promoted such as a host of publishing frameworks linked to safety and even avoiding models that came with massive risks. This combined with coordination from regulators on a global scale meant a better means to tackle the problem.
See, the goal right now appears to be related to making sure AI systems function in an ethical manner and give rise to zero harm as the tech world evolves.
Other than the Western world of tech firms, companies arising from China and even the Arab World were said to have taken part in this pledge. Common names include Samsung, Xiaomi, and Tencent.
In this manner, researchers would be evaluating systems for all sorts of biases and issues that put others at a serious disadvantage. The intention seems to be linked to proper monitoring of AI models to attain all sorts of perspectives regarding risks having to do with deployment.
Meanwhile, leaders from several other countries like America and the EU have shown positive remarks for the initiative and hope more meetings on this front can be held to ascertain the mighty risks attached.
Many political leaders feel this is a great start and with time, more regulation would be required. It’s a major step taken by OpenAI and it’s been getting a lot of attention as the company’s own AI safety team was disbanded last week. Today, no superalignment team exists that has to do with ensuring AI acts are rolled out safely.
The report arises after two top members from the AI giant left the organization as they felt the leadership at OpenAI was more keen on putting other things as top priority while sidelining safety.
And due to the fact that safety is not being taken as seriously as it should, they sent in their resignations on this front. As expected, this left the world questioning OpenAI’s stance and what it was doing.
Sam Altman and his executives rushed into the picture and generated responses linked to concerns that many were having. They reassured the general public about the firm’s commitment to carrying out rigorous tests and took into careful consideration as well as a host of security measures that were simply world-class.
Image: DIW-Aigen
Read next: Global Tax Analysis: Comparing Nations with the Highest and Lowest Corporate Taxation