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Gates, Musk, Zuckerberg in DC for Secret Senate AI Hearing

Get ready for an exclusive⁣ gathering of tech titans! Bill Gates, Elon Musk, and Mark Zuckerberg are among the big‌ names ​from Big Tech who ⁣will be appearing at the Senate’s closed-door AI Insight Forum on Sept. 13.

“Both parties recognize that AI is something we can’t ignore, but we need a lot of help understanding the best way ‌forward,” Senate Majority​ Leader Chuck Schumer (R-N.Y.) said in a ⁢Sept. 7 ​announcement of the closed-door hearing.

Mr. ⁣Schumer, Sen. Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.), Sen. Mike Rounds (R-S.D.), and Sen.⁣ Todd Young⁤ (R-Ind.) are the bipartisan leaders of the forum. Mr. Rounds and Mr.​ Heinrich are co-chairs of the Senate AI Caucus,⁣ in which⁤ Mr. Young also participates.

Mr. Musk of Twitter/X and SpaceX,‌ Meta’s⁣ Mr. Zuckerberg, and Microsoft founder ⁣Mr. Gates will be joined by other top ⁤figures ⁤in⁤ the​ tech world, including Sam Altman of OpenAI and Sundar Pichai of Alphabet.

“It’s an⁢ effort to make sure that our colleagues are getting information directly from some of these leaders,” Mr.⁢ Rounds said in a conversation with Mr. Heinrich ​at a Washington Post Live event on Sept. 12, as reported by ​MeriTalk.

In addition, Charles Rivkin of the Motion Picture Association, a film trade organization, will be present. Mr. Rivkin’s appearance comes during an ongoing, ​months-long strike⁤ by members of the Writers Guild of America. The striking writers​ are concerned in part that ChatGPT and ⁤comparable tools could⁣ replace ‌them.

Other attendees include Democratic donor Tristan Harris of the Center for Humane Technology. Mr. Harris ⁢has previously cautioned Congress that “conspiracy ​theories” may spread if technology is⁢ not regulated more strongly, specifically citing work ⁣by Alex Jones and InfoWars.

Another Democratic mega-donor, former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, is also expected at the event, as is Randi ‍Weingarten of the National Federation of ‌Teachers.

A May report on AI from the Department of Education maintains ⁣that‍ the agency‍ “firmly rejects the idea that AI could replace teachers.”

Building Knowledge

⁣ In his Sept. 7 comments previewing the meeting,⁤ Mr. Schumer said the forum is going to be‌ just⁤ “the first of a ​series of forums that will give ⁤our committees the knowledge⁣ base‌ and thought insights to draft ⁤the right kind of policies.”

“It will be a meeting unlike ⁤any other that we have seen in ​the Senate in a very long time, perhaps ever: a coming together of ‍top voices in business, civil rights, defense, research, labor, the arts,‌ all together, in one room, having a much-needed conversation about ​how Congress can tackle​ AI,” he added.

“One⁤ of the‌ questions that I’m asking ‍myself is, what’s the threshold at which⁤ you begin to ⁤regulate something? There are going to⁣ be⁤ applications for AI that are very low risk,⁣ and we⁣ don’t want to stifle innovation, but‍ there are ⁤also going to be applications that ⁣have very real-world consequences,” Mr. Heinrich said at the Washington Post Live event.

Lawmakers and agencies in the U.S. and across the world are scrambling to address AI in the wake of headline-grabbing ​developments over the ⁢past year, such as​ the debut of the ​generative AI service ‍ChatGPT.
The ChatGPT app is displayed on an iPhone​ in New York‌ on May‌ 18, 2023. (The Canadian Press/AP, ‍Richard Drew)

The star-studded Senate meeting ‌occurs less​ than a⁤ week after a Senate ⁣energy committee hearing ⁣dedicated to AI and the Department of‍ Energy.

It will take place on Capitol Hill the ‍same⁢ day as a House ‌hearing led by⁣ Rep. Nancy⁣ Mace (R-S.C.).⁤ That hearing, held under the auspices​ of⁢ the oversight committee, will have a similar focus on AI and agencies, though with more of a skew toward the defense bureaucracy.

“Strict guardrails are needed to ​protect Americans’ privacy⁣ and prevent them from being victimized by algorithmic bias. This⁤ hearing is a great opportunity ‌to discuss how⁢ AI can ⁤best be safely integrated into⁤ federal agency operations in a manner that enhances national and homeland security, streamlines service delivery, and make government more efficient,” Ms. Mace said.

Concern⁢ over algorithmic bias and,⁢ more generally,‌ race has been a significant theme in the Biden administration’s response to AI innovations over the⁣ past ‍year.

The May report ⁢from the Department of Education called algorithmic discrimination an​ AI risk “of the highest importance.”

Ultra-realistic ‌AI​ robot Ai-Da poses in front of a painting ‍it‌ made⁤ during the press preview of the London Design Biennale 2023 at Somerset ⁣House, central London, on June 1, 2023.‌ (Ben Stansall/AFP via⁣ Getty Images)

Biden Meets Tech Leaders, Activists

At a June meeting in San Francisco, President Joe Biden convened with tech executives and other leaders and activists, including​ Mr. ‌Harris.

In a statement⁣ released prior‌ to that event, a White House spokesperson said the experts who gathered were ⁤”outspoken on the ‌impact of AI on⁣ jobs, children, bias and prejudice,” among other topics.

“We [need] innovation on guardrails so we can⁢ find creative and new ways‌ to ⁢protect our kids, our privacy, prevent racial bias, prevent doomsday scenarios,” Mr. Schumer said o



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