In a brand new letter, OpenAI chief technique officer Jason Kwon insists that AI laws ought to be left to the federal authorities. As reported beforehand by Bloomberg, Kwon says {that a} new AI security invoice into consideration in California may gradual progress and trigger corporations to depart the state.
A federally-driven set of AI insurance policies, relatively than a patchwork of state legal guidelines, will foster innovation and place the U.S. to guide the event of world requirements. Because of this, we be part of different AI labs, builders, specialists and members of California’s Congressional delegation in respectfully opposing SB 1047 and welcome the chance to stipulate a few of our key considerations.
The letter is addressed to California State Senator Scott Wiener, who initially launched SB 1047, also called the Protected and Safe Innovation for Frontier Synthetic Intelligence Fashions Act.
In response to proponents like Wiener, it establishes requirements forward of the event of extra highly effective AI fashions, requires precautions like pre-deployment security testing and different safeguards, provides whistleblower protections for workers of AI labs, offers California’s Lawyer Common energy to take authorized motion if AI fashions trigger hurt, and requires establishing a “public cloud pc cluster” known as CalCompute.
In a response to the letter revealed Wednesday night, Wiener factors out that the proposed necessities apply to any firm doing enterprise in California, whether or not they’re headquartered within the state or not, so the argument “is not sensible.” He additionally writes that OpenAI “…doesn’t criticize a single provision of the invoice” and closes by saying, “SB 1047 is a extremely cheap invoice that asks massive AI labs to do what they’ve already dedicated to doing, specifically, take a look at their massive fashions for catastrophic security danger.”
The invoice is at present awaiting its ultimate vote earlier than going to Governor Gavin Newsom’s desk.
Right here is OpenAI’s letter in full: