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AI as Normal Technology

(knightcolumbia.org)
237 points randomwalker | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.212s | source
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bux93 ◴[] No.43715147[source]
"We view AI as a tool that we can and should remain in control of, and we argue that this goal does not require drastic policy interventions"

If you read the EU AI act, you'll see it's not really about AI at all, but about quality assurance of business processes that are scaled. (Look at pharma, where GMP rules about QA apply equally to people pipetting and making single-patient doses as it does to mass production of ibuprofen - those rules are eerily similar to the quality system prescribed by the AI act.)

Will a think piece like this be used to argue that regulation is bad, no matter how benificial to the citizenry, because the regulation has 'AI' in the name, because the policy impedes someone who shouts 'AI' as a buzzword, or just because it was introduced in the present in which AI exists? Yes.

replies(1): >>43715224 #
randomwalker ◴[] No.43715224[source]
I appreciate the concern, but we have a whole section on policy where we are very concrete about our recommendations, and we explicitly disavow any broadly anti-regulatory argument or agenda.

The "drastic" policy interventions that that sentence refers to are ideas like banning open-source or open-weight AI — those explicitly motivated by perceived superintelligence risks.

replies(1): >>43715323 #
evrythingisfine ◴[] No.43715323[source]
The assumption of status quo or equilibrium with technology that is already growing faster than we can keep up with seems irrational to me.

Or, put another way:

https://youtu.be/0oBx7Jg4m-o

replies(3): >>43715689 #>>43715890 #>>43718125 #
1. cootsnuck ◴[] No.43718125[source]
Read the OP. They talk about that.