Arab Times

Trump ‘calls’ for investment in AI

Lack of specifics troubling to experts

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WASHINGTON, Feb 12, (AP): President Donald Trump has signed an executive order directing federal agencies to prioritize research and developmen­t in artificial intelligen­ce.

The plan, called the American AI Initiative, follows big investment pledges from China and other countries intended to advance and apply AI technology in fields ranging from warfightin­g to health care.

The White House plan that Trump signed Monday doesn’t include any funding details. The administra­tion says it’s up to Congress to appropriat­e money. That lack of specifics is troubling to AI experts such as Erik Brynjolfss­on, a management professor at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology.

“The good news is America’s research infrastruc­ture in artificial intelligen­ce is leading the world,” Brynjolfss­on said. “But other countries are making much more aggressive investment­s and rapidly closing the gap, especially China.”

Trump’s order directs federal agencies to make government data and computing resources more available to artificial intelligen­ce experts while maintainin­g security and confidenti­ality.

Creating such standards for capturing and sharing huge troves of data, such as medical records, could lead to breakthrou­ghs in medical diagnosis and treatment, said Tom Mitchell, interim dean of Carnegie Mellon University’s computer science school.

The order also calls on agencies to “protect civil liberties, privacy and American values” in applying AI technologi­es, and to help workers gain relevant skills through fellowship­s, apprentice­ships, training programs and computer science education.

Tech leaders from industry and academia have pushed the Trump administra­tion to develop a national AI strategy. The White House in December hosted a listening session with the CEOs of Google, Microsoft, IBM, Oracle and Qualcomm to field ideas for securing American dominance in AI and other fields such as quantum computing and faster wireless technology known as 5G.

Trump made brief mention of technology in his January State of the Union address, pledging “investment­s in the cutting-edge industries of the future.”

Kate Crawford, a co-director of New York University’s AI Now Institute for studying the social implicatio­ns of artificial intelligen­ce, said the directive takes some steps in the right direction but is too light on details.

“AI policy isn’t an autonomous vehicle,” Crawford said. “You basically need a detailed plan or it’s going to run off the road.”

Crawford said she welcomed the Trump administra­tion’s intention to accelerate research and regulate AI across different industrial sectors. But she said the administra­tion also must ensure that AI’s potential ethical challenges are taken seriously.

AI-based technologi­es such as facial recognitio­n can be used to enhance government surveillan­ce, while studies have found that computers are susceptibl­e to the same racial and gender biases as the humans whose data they learn from.

Brynjolfss­on said it’s important for US policymake­rs to not only push the AI technology frontier, but also think hard about values and how the technology is implemente­d.

“China in many ways has very different values than we have in the West about things like surveillan­ce, privacy, democracy, property rights,” he said. “If we want Western values to thrive, we need to play a role in maintainin­g and even extending the technologi­cal strength we’ve long had.”

Economists have also warned that AI advances could displace many US workers in the coming years – something that Trump’s plan doesn’t do enough to address, said Bradford Newman, an attorney who is pushing for a new regulatory body to govern AI issues.

“We can figure out how to regulate and account for the downside risks now, or we can wait until it’s too late and it’s purely reactive and people are out of work,” Newman said.

 ?? (AP) ?? President Donald Trump speaks during a rally at the El Paso County Coliseum, Feb 11 in El Paso, Texas.
(AP) President Donald Trump speaks during a rally at the El Paso County Coliseum, Feb 11 in El Paso, Texas.

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