Connecticut Post

White House proposes tech ‘bill of rights’ to limit AI harms

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Top science advisers to President Joe Biden are calling for a new “bill of rights“to guard against powerful new artificial intelligen­ce technology.

The White House’s Office of Science and Technology Policy on Friday launched a fact-finding mission to look at facial recognitio­n and other biometric tools used to identify people or assess their emotional or mental states and character.

Biden’s chief science adviser, Eric Lander, and the deputy director for science and society, Alondra Nelson, also published an opinion piece in Wired magazine detailing the need to develop new safeguards against faulty and harmful uses of AI that can unfairly discrimina­te against people or violate their privacy.

“Enumeratin­g the rights is just a first step,“they wrote. “What might we do to protect them? Possibilit­ies include the federal government refusing to buy software or technology products that fail to respect these rights, requiring federal contractor­s to use technologi­es that adhere to this ‘bill of rights,’ or adopting new laws and regulation­s to fill gaps.“

This is not the first time the Biden administra­tion has voiced concerns about harmful uses of AI, but it’s one of its clearest steps toward doing something about it.

European regulators have already taken measures to rein in the riskiest AI applicatio­ns that could threaten people’s safety or rights. European Parliament lawmakers took a step this week in favor of banning biometric mass surveillan­ce, though none of the bloc’s nations are bound to Tuesday’s vote that called for new rules blocking law enforcemen­t from scanning facial features in public spaces.

 ?? Matt Slocum / Associated Press ?? Lander
Matt Slocum / Associated Press Lander

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