
The Nonlinear Library LW - Chinese scientists acknowledge xrisk & call for international regulatory body [Linkpost] by Akash
Nov 2, 2023
01:20
Welcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: Chinese scientists acknowledge xrisk & call for international regulatory body [Linkpost], published by Akash on November 2, 2023 on LessWrong.
Some highlights from the article (bolding added):
Several Chinese academic attendees of the summit at Bletchley Park, England, which starts on Wednesday, have signed on to a statement that warns that
advanced AI will pose an "existential risk to humanity" in the coming decades.
The group, which includes Andrew Yao, one of China's most prominent computer scientists,
calls for the creation of an international regulatory body
, the
mandatory registration and auditing of advanced AI systems
, the inclusion of
instant "shutdown" procedures
and for developers to spend
30 per cent of their research budget on AI safety.
The proposals are more focused on existential risk than US president Joe Biden's executive order on AI issued this week, which encompasses algorithmic discrimination and labour-market impacts, as well as the European Union's proposed AI Act, which focuses on protecting rights such as privacy.
Note that the statement was also signed by several western experts, including Yoshua Bengio.
Thanks for listening. To help us out with The Nonlinear Library or to learn more, please visit nonlinear.org
Some highlights from the article (bolding added):
Several Chinese academic attendees of the summit at Bletchley Park, England, which starts on Wednesday, have signed on to a statement that warns that
advanced AI will pose an "existential risk to humanity" in the coming decades.
The group, which includes Andrew Yao, one of China's most prominent computer scientists,
calls for the creation of an international regulatory body
, the
mandatory registration and auditing of advanced AI systems
, the inclusion of
instant "shutdown" procedures
and for developers to spend
30 per cent of their research budget on AI safety.
The proposals are more focused on existential risk than US president Joe Biden's executive order on AI issued this week, which encompasses algorithmic discrimination and labour-market impacts, as well as the European Union's proposed AI Act, which focuses on protecting rights such as privacy.
Note that the statement was also signed by several western experts, including Yoshua Bengio.
Thanks for listening. To help us out with The Nonlinear Library or to learn more, please visit nonlinear.org
