>But on Tuesday, Sam Altman, the chief executive of the San Francisco start-up OpenAI, testified before members of a Senate subcommittee and largely agreed with them on the need to regulate the increasingly powerful A.I. technology being created inside his company and others like Google and Microsoft.
That sounds more like regulate all that catch up to us, so we keep the benefit of experience because we were there first.
>he called for the United States to adopt a licensing and registration regime for AI models “above a crucial threshold of capabilities,” arguing that requiring government approval would help mitigate potential safety concerns.
>The trick, critics say, is where Altman draws that “crucial threshold.
That sounds more like regulate all that catch up to us, so we keep the benefit of experience because we were there first.
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/05/16/technology/openai-altman-...
Same here
>he called for the United States to adopt a licensing and registration regime for AI models “above a crucial threshold of capabilities,” arguing that requiring government approval would help mitigate potential safety concerns.
>The trick, critics say, is where Altman draws that “crucial threshold.
https://foreignpolicy.com/2023/06/20/openai-ceo-diplomacy-ar...