The Times (Shreveport)

What risks of misuse do advanced AI models pose?

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WASHINGTON – The Biden administra­tion is poised to open up a new front in its effort to safeguard U.S. AI from China and Russia with preliminar­y plans to place guardrails around the most advanced AI models, Reuters reported on Wednesday.

Government and private sector researcher­s worry U.S. adversarie­s could use the models, which mine vast amounts of text and images to summarize informatio­n and generate content, to wage aggressive cyber attacks or even create potent biological weapons. Here are some threats posed by AI: Deepfakes – realistic yet fabricated videos created by AI algorithms trained on copious online footage – are surfacing on social media, blurring fact and fiction in the polarized world of U.S. politics.

While such synthetic media has been around for several years, it’s been turbocharg­ed over the past year by a slew of new “generative AI” tools such as Midjourney that make it cheap and easy to create convincing deepfakes.

Image creation tools powered by artificial intelligen­ce from companies including OpenAI and Microsoft, can be used to produce photos that could promote election or voting-related disinforma­tion, despite each having policies against creating misleading content, researcher­s said in a report in March.

Some disinforma­tion campaigns simply harness the ability of AI to mimic real news articles as a means of disseminat­ing false informatio­n. While major social media platforms have made efforts to prohibit and remove deepfakes, their effectiven­ess at policing such content varies. For example, last year, a Chinese government-controlled news site using a generative AI platform pushed a previously circulated false claim that the United States was running a lab in Kazakhstan to create biological weapons for use against China, the Department of Homeland

Security said in its 2024 homeland threat assessment.

National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan, speaking at an AI event in Washington on Wednesday, said the problem has no easy solutions because it combines the capacity of AI with “the intent of state, non-state actors, to use disinforma­tion at scale, to disrupt democracie­s, to advance propaganda, to shape perception in the world.”

“Right now the offense is beating the defense big time,” he said.

The American intelligen­ce community, think tanks and academics are increasing­ly concerned about risks posed by foreign bad actors gaining access to advanced AI capabiliti­es. Researcher­s at Gryphon Scientific and Rand Corporatio­n noted that advanced AI models can provide informatio­n that could help create biological weapons.

Gryphon studied how large language models (LLM) – computer programs that draw from massive amounts of text to generate responses to queries – could be used by hostile actors to cause harm in the domain of life sciences and found they “can provide informatio­n that could aid a malicious actor in creating a biological weapon by providing useful, accurate and detailed informatio­n across every step in this pathway.”

They found, for example, that an LLM could provide post-doctoral level knowledge to trouble-shoot problems when working with a pandemic-capable virus.

Rand research showed that LLMs could help in the planning and execution of a biological attack. They found an LLM could for example suggest aerosol delivery methods for botulinum toxin.

DHS said cyber actors would likely use AI to “develop new tools” to “enable larger-scale, faster, efficient, and more evasive cyber attacks” against critical infrastruc­ture including pipelines and railways, in its 2024 homeland threat assessment.

China and other adversarie­s are developing AI technologi­es that could undermine U.S. cyber defenses, DHS said.

Contributi­ng: Alexandra Alper; Chris Sanders and Anna Driver

REUTERS

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OLIVIER DOULIERY/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Dr. Nora Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse said children who lose a parent to an overdose face a higher risk of health and social issues such as substance abuse and mental health challenges.
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