OpenAI has released a detailed "economic blueprint" outlining its vision for AI regulation and development in the U.S.
Details:
· OpenAI urges the U.S. government to dramatically increase spending on chips, energy, and data infrastructure to support AI development. It also backs the expansion of renewable energy and nuclear power for future data centers.
· The blueprint suggests creating best practices for deploying AI models, streamlining collaborations with national security agencies, and limiting AI exports to adversarial nations.
· It also argues that developers should be able to use publicly available information, including copyrighted material, for model training, while ensuring protections for content creators.
· OpenAI promotes the economic benefits of AI infrastructure development, saying, “This will create tens of thousands of skilled-trade jobs, boost local economies through spending and indirect job creation, and modernize our energy grid in the near term.”
· The startup has also cautioned that the United States risks losing an estimated $175 billion in global investment for AI projects to China-backed initiatives.
While its proposals may spark debate, they underscore the company’s ambition to remain a central player in the development of U.S. AI policy and global leadership in the field.
https://lnkd.in/g28kaMqb
Last year I was invited to peer review the UNESCO AI Competency Framework that was written by Fengchun Miao and Mutlu Cukurova.
That document, along with its student-focused companion by Kelly Shiohira
has greatly influenced my thinking around AI in Education.
The hard copies I received at the end of last year (thanks Glen Hertelendy) are now en route to the Kellogg College, University of Oxford and Department of Education, University of Oxford reading rooms for our students and educators to refer to.
Thank you Fengchun and team.
PhD Candidate | Pedology | Soil Geomorphology | Digital Soil Mapping
11moWell done ma'am