Friend,
As you know, Ted is the leading voice in Congress on the need to
regulate -- smartly -- AI, and Time Magazine has
recognized his work by naming him one of the 100 Most Influential
People in AI in 2023!
We're so incredibly proud of how Ted is using his background in
computer science to make sure that we're encouraging innovation while
also protecting our future. If
you want to support Ted's work to smartly regulate AI so the United
States can keep leading, please chip in today!
SUPPORT
TED
Thanks, Team Lieu
P.S. Want to read the full profile? See below!
Representative Ted Lieu made history this year when, in
January, he introduced the first-ever piece of federal legislation
written by AI. Using ChatGPT, he prompted the technology to write a
comprehensive congressional resolution in his own style and voice,
expressing support for Congress to regulate AI. Out came a resolution
that he didn’t even need to edit. “AI already has reshaped the world
in the same way that the steam engine reshaped society,” the
California Democrat says over Congress’s August recess. “But with the
new advancements in AI, it’s going to become a supersonic jet engine
in a few years, with a personality, and we need to be prepared for
that.”
Lieu, 54, would know: he’s one of just
three out of 535 members of Congress with a computer-science degree.
He says regulating AI is one of his top priorities as a policymaker,
but doing so requires Congress to fully grasp the topic. That’s why he
has been pushing (along with Representative Anna Eshoo) for the
creation of a bipartisan commission of AI experts that would study
advancements in AI and propose new recommendations for how to regulate
it. He also recently co-introduced bipartisan legislation to prevent
AI from ever launching a nuclear weapon by itself—no matter how
advanced AI gets in the future—as well as new guardrails on the use of
facial-recognition technology. “We’re still in the early stages,” Lieu
says, “but that doesn’t mean we can’t legislate on certain discrete
problems.”
When asked if he’s worried that more
regulation in the U.S. will limit the nation’s ability to compete with
foreign companies—particularly in China—Lieu said policymakers need to
be careful. “For regulations that would harm innovation—if other
countries aren’t doing it—I don’t think we should do those regulations
unless we actually have to.”
But Lieu doesn’t see
the U.S. as playing catch-up on regulating AI compared with other
countries—not even with the European Union, which this summer saw its
Parliament pass what could be the world’s first comprehensive legal
framework for AI if implemented. “Based on briefings I attended, the
U.S. is ahead of other countries in generative AI,” he says. “To even
do generative AI at a large scale, you need an incredible amount of
resources. ChatGPT essentially strings together 25,000 Nvidia chips.
The power they use is so massive. Not a lot of countries or companies
have this capability. We need to make sure the United States remains
ahead, and so our regulations need to encourage innovation and at the
same time prevent harms that can happen from generative
AI.”
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