One thing that everyone seems to agree with in an increasingly divided world is AI It is a huge destructive, sometimes downright destructive – phenomenonon.
exist AI Power Summit of Conductors Leaders from the world of tech, politics and media gathered on Monday to discuss how AI can change its intertwined world. The summit included voices from the AI industry, current U.S. senator and former Trump administration official, and publishers including Wired’s parent company Condé Nast. You can view the live broadcast of the event in full below.
“In journalism, many of us are equally excited and worried about AI,” said Anna Wintour, chief content officer of Condé Nast and Vogue’s global editorial director, in his opening speech. “We are worried that it replaces our work and the work that we write about.”
Leaders from the political world provide contrasting visions to ensure that AI has a positive impact overall. Senator Richard Blumenthal, a Democrat in Connecticut, said policy makers should learn from social media and figure out the appropriate guardrails surrounding copyright infringement and other key issues before AI causes too much damage. “We want to deal with the perfect storm that swallows up journalism,” he said in a conversation with cable global editorial director Katie Drummond.
In another conversation, Dean Ball, a senior fellow at the American Innovation Foundation, was one of the authors of the Trump administration. Artificial Intelligence Action Plandefend the policy blueprint’s vision for AI regulation. He claims it introduces more rules around AI risks than any other government has generated.
Figures within the AI industry also portray the influence of AI, which believes it will be a boon for economic growth and will not be deployed.