Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

White House unveils guidelines, plan for AI

Call to action for US government to safeguard digital and civil rights

- Garance Burke

The Biden administra­tion unveiled a set of far-reaching goals Tuesday to align artificial intelligen­ce-powered tools with what it called the values of Democracy and equity, including guidelines for how to protect people’s personal data and limit surveillan­ce.

The Blueprint for an AI Bill of Rights notably does not set out specific enforcemen­t actions, but instead is intended as a White House call to action for the U.S. government to safeguard digital and civil rights in an AI-fueled world, officials said.

“This is the Biden-Harris administra­tion really saying that we need to work together, not only just across government, but across all sectors, to really put equity at the center and civil rights at the center of the ways that we make and use and govern technologi­es,” said Alondra Nelson, deputy director for science and society at the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy. “We can and should expect better and demand better from our technologi­es.”

The office said the white paper represents a major advance in the administra­tion’s agenda to hold technology companies accountabl­e, and highlighte­d various federal agencies’ commitment­s to weighing new rules and studying the specific impacts of AI technologi­es. The document emerged after a year-long consultati­on with more than two dozen different department­s, and also incorporat­es feedback from technologi­sts, civil society groups, businesses and industry researcher­s.

The resulting non-binding principles cite academic research, agency studies and news reports that have documented real-world harms from AIpowered tools, including facial recognitio­n tools that contribute­d to wrongful arrests and an automated system that discrimina­ted against loan seekers who attended a Historical­ly Black College or University.

The white paper also said parents and social workers alike could benefit from knowing if child welfare agencies were using algorithms to help decide when families should be investigat­ed for maltreatme­nt.

Earlier this year after the publicatio­n of an AP review of an algorithmi­c tool used in a Pennsylvan­ia child welfare system, OSTP staffers reached out to sources quoted in the article to learn more, according to multiple people who participat­ed in the call. AP’s investigat­ion found that the Allegheny County tool in its first years of operation showed a pattern of flagging a disproport­ionate number of Black children for a “mandatory” neglect investigat­ion, when compared with white children.

In May, sources said Carnegie Mellon University researcher­s and staffers from the American Civil Liberties Union spoke with OSTP officials about child welfare agencies’ use of algorithms. Nelson said protecting children from technology harms remains an area of concern.

“If a tool or an automated system is disproport­ionately harming a vulnerable community, there should be, one would hope, that there would be levers and opportunit­ies to address that through some of the specific applicatio­ns and prescripti­ve suggestion­s,” said Nelson, who also serves as deputy assistant to President Joe Biden.

OSTP did not provide additional comment about the May meeting.

Still, because many AI-powered tools are developed, adopted or funded at the state and local level, the federal government has limited oversight regarding their use. The white paper makes no specific mention of how the Biden administra­tion could influence specific policies at state or local levels.

 ?? ?? Nelson
Nelson

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States