Google Bard Block Fuels EU Digital Ghetto Fears
Google and other tech Leviathans are playing a wait-and-see approach with the EU’s AI Act, whether or not AI technology will run afoul of EU privacy laws.
Google and other tech Leviathans are playing a wait-and-see approach with the EU’s AI Act, whether or not AI technology will run afoul of EU privacy laws.
The EU’s AI Act will face its final parliamentary hurdle at a plenary session in Brussels next month, with MEPs keen to prevent the use of AI technology for discriminatory purposes.
EU Commission Executive Vice President Margrethe Vestager this week stressed that “there is no time to waste” on passing restrictions.
We are marked from the day of our birth with an end date; all is indeed vanity. To forget our mortality is thus to lose something human, to become inhuman.
There, in this digital wilderness, we are tempted by every possible output, all the kingdoms of a virtual earth.
The Back Rooms, a popular bit of Internet folklore, reminds us of the recurring horror motif of a reality adjacent to ours, familiar but uncanny, whose real-world congealment we may soon be facing.
Without guardrails in place, Elon Musk and over 1,300 AI experts and executives foresee a precarious future for mankind.
There must be a golden path between politics hijacking the freedom of information and rogue programs running amok on the internet. The outcome of this watershed moment in humanity’s history depends on our ability to find it.
Even AI researchers are mystified by their creations.
As Europe’s AI regulations are set to become global standards, the U.S. seeks to gain its foothold through R&D cooperation.
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