ChatGPT will be on the agenda of the G7 summit: Kishida
April 19, 2023
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Leaders of the Group of Seven Advanced Economies discuss generative artificial intelligence ChatGPT when they meet in Hiroshima next month for a summit, Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida
Leaders of the Group of Seven Advanced Economies discuss generative artificial intelligence ChatGPT when they meet in Hiroshima next month for a summit, Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida told the Kyodo news agency on Wednesday.
“Need to create international standardsThis Kishida said at a meeting with the leaders of the regional newspaper.
Japan’s prime minister speaks amid rising petitions to regulate advanced artificial intelligence systems as ChatGPT and other programs become more widely used.
This week, European Union lawmakers called on world leaders to hold a summit to find ways to control the development of these systems.
Meanwhile, U.S. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said last week that he had made an attempt set standards for AI to solve problems of national security and education.
Photo: Reuters
A few weeks ago, the Center for Artificial Intelligence and Digital Policy (CAIDP) filed a lawsuit against OpenAI with the US Federal Trade Commission (FTC, official), alleging that the GPT-4 product is “biased, misleading and a risk to privacy and public safety“.
“The FTC has clear responsibility for investigating and prohibit unfair and misleading business practices. We believe the FTC should take a closer look at OpenAI and GPT-4,” said CAIDP President Mark Rothenberg.
According to Rotenberg, OpenAI does not comply with the methods proposed by the FTC for example, associated with the guarantee by artificial intelligence companies of the “empirical validity of the data and models used”, as well as their transparency.
Photo: Reuters
Similarly, the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) called forframework for the ethical development and regulation of chatbots. and argued that AI systems can enhance media but also create threats, so in an editorial written with the Chat GPT system itself.
“Chatbots are at risk random promotion of disinformation and fake newsand, moreover, they could “completely replace journalists, depriving them of job security and leaving many media workers out of work,” warns the IFJ in its April editorial.
For this reason, this press federation proposes “collaboration between the media industry, technology companies and journalists’ unions” for “develop a framework for the ethical development and regulation of chatbotswhile covering jobs.
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