Home Artificial Intelligence OpenAI Proposes Establishment of International AI Regulatory Body

OpenAI Proposes Establishment of International AI Regulatory Body

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OpenAI Proposes Establishment of International AI Regulatory Body

Open AI proposed the establishment of a world organization to manage artificial intelligence (AI).

The speed of AI innovation is so fast that it’s difficult for one country or institution to manage, so it’s crucial to create a world regulatory body corresponding to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman explaining the necessity for a regulatory body at a US Senate hearing on the sixteenth (Photo = YouTube capture)

In keeping with a report by TechCrunch on the twenty second (local time), OpenAI said in a blog post, “AI systems will exceed the extent of experts in most areas inside 10 years and perform production activities comparable to tech giants.” We’d like to administer the risks posed by ‘superintelligence AI’ that transcends intelligence.”

To realize this, three ideas were proposed.

OpenAI first proposed introducing the concept of growth rate of AI capabilities and adjusting the event speed while limiting it to a certain percentage per 12 months in order that superintelligence development will be safely carried out.

It also proposed establishing a world organization corresponding to the IAEA to administer superintelligence development. If AI develops beyond the critical value of function by setting a threshold value, system inspection, audit request, safety standard compliance check, and restrictions on security level and distribution are to be imposed.

Thirdly, he proposed to have technology to ‘alignment’ the superintelligence to adapt to human values. That is what OpenAI has been talking about since last 12 months to support human feedback and evaluation, and train an AI system to conduct alignment research.

The blog post posted by OpenAI was jointly published by CEO Sam Altman, Chairman Greg Brockman, and Chief Scientist Ilya Schutzkeber.

Of their post, they said, “The scope and defaults of AI systems ought to be democratically determined by people all over the world. Individual users must have control.” Emphasized.

Then again, Sam Altman warned of the hazards of AI at a US Senate hearing on the sixteenth, arguing that the introduction of a licensing system for regulation and the establishment of an independent oversight body is crucial.

Reporter Jeong Byeong-il jbi@aitimes.com

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