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How Governments Should Manage the Rise of AI

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A strange thing is happening in the world of artificial intelligence. The very people who are leading its development are warning of the immense risks of their work. A recent statement released by the nonprofit Center for AI Safety, signed by hundreds of important AI executives and researchers, said: “Mitigating the risk of extinction from AI should be a global priority alongside other societal-scale risks such as pandemics and nuclear war.”

Extinction? Nuclear war? If they’re so worried, why don’t these scientists just stop?

It’s easier said than done. Nuclear scientists didn’t stop until they perfected the bomb. And AI has innumerable benefits, too. But the statement, alongside a chorus of recent calls for government regulation of AI, raises several questions: What should the rules governing the development of AI look like? Who crafts them? Who polices them? How do these norms exist in tandem with society’s existing laws? How do we account for differences among cultures and countries?

For answers, FP’s Ravi Agrawal spoke with the academic and policy advisor Alondra Nelson, who served in the White House for the first two years of U.S. President Joe Biden’s administration. Nelson was the first African American and the first woman of color to lead the Office of Science and Technology Policy and led the drafting of an influential Blueprint for an AI Bill of Rights. Nelson is currently a professor at the Institute for Advanced Study, an independent research center in Princeton, New Jersey. FP subscribers can watch the full discussion or read an edited and condensed transcript, exclusive to FP Insiders.

U.S. President Joe Biden’s former top tech policymaker says it’s up to the government to set boundaries, and that Microsoft, OpenAI, and others should not be allowed to self-regulate and decide what the guardrails are going to be. 

Alondra Nelson, Biden’s former top tech policymaker, warns that the United States must find ways to collaborate with China on the significant risk posed by AI.

Watch Biden’s former top AI thinker, Alondra Nelson, discuss how we should begin to think about regulating artificial intelligence.

Alondra Nelson

Harold F. Linder chair, School of Social Science, Institute for Advanced Study.

Dr. Alondra Nelson is the Harold F. Linder Chair in the School of Social Science at the Institute for Advanced Study and a distinguished senior fellow at the Center for American Progress. A past president of the Social Science Research Council, she was a professor of sociology at Columbia University and also served as the inaugural dean of social science. From 2021–23, Nelson was a deputy assistant to U.S. President Joe Biden, and the acting director and principal deputy director for science and society of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy. 

Host

Ravi Agrawal

Editor in chief, Foreign Policy

Ravi Agrawal is the editor in chief of Foreign Policy, the host of FP Live, and a regular world affairs analyst on TV and radio. Before joining FP in 2018, Agrawal worked at CNN for more than a decade in full-time roles spanning three continents, including as the network’s New Delhi bureau chief and correspondent. He is the author of India Connected: How the Smartphone Is Transforming the World’s Largest Democracy

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