AI

This week in AI: Companies voluntarily submit to AI guidelines — for now

Comment

White House
Image Credits: Glowimages / Getty Images

Keeping up with an industry as fast-moving as AI is a tall order. So until an AI can do it for you, here’s a handy roundup of recent stories in the world of machine learning, along with notable research and experiments we didn’t cover on their own.

This week in AI, we saw OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, Inflection, Microsoft, Meta and Amazon voluntarily commit to pursuing shared AI safety and transparency goals ahead of a planned executive order from the Biden administration.

As my colleague Devin Coldewey writes, there’s no rule or enforcement being proposed, here — the practices agreed to are purely voluntary. But the pledges indicate, in broad strokes, the AI regulatory approaches and policies that each vendor might find amendable in the U.S. as well as abroad.

Among other commitments, the companies volunteered to conduct security tests of AI systems before release, share information on AI mitigation techniques and develop watermarking techniques that make AI-generated content easier to identify. They also said that they would invest in cybersecurity to protect private AI data and facilitate the reporting of vulnerabilities, as well as prioritize research on societal risks like systemic bias and privacy issues.

The commitments are important step, to be sure — even if they’re not enforceable. But one wonders if there are ulterior motives on the part of the undersigners.

Top AI companies visit the White House to make ‘voluntary’ safety commitments

Reportedly, OpenAI drafted an internal policy memo that shows the company supports the idea of requiring government licenses from anyone who wants to develop AI systems. CEO Sam Altman first raised the idea at a U.S. Senate hearing in May, during which he backed the creation of an agency that could issue licenses for AI products — and revoke them should anyone violate set rules.

In a recent interview with press, Anna Makanju, OpenAI’s VP of global affairs, insisted that OpenAI wasn’t “pushing” for licenses and that the company only supports licensing regimes for AI models more powerful than OpenAI’s current GPT-4. But government-issued licenses, should they be implemented in the way that OpenAI proposes, set the stage for a potential clash with startups and open source developers who may see them as an attempt to make it more difficult for others to break into the space.

Devin said it best, I think, when he described it to me as “dropping nails on the road behind them in a race.” At the very least, it illustrates the two-faced nature of AI companies who seek to placate regulators while shaping policy to their favor (in this case putting small challengers at a disadvantage) behind the scenes.

It’s a worrisome state of affairs. But if policymakers step up to the plate, there’s hope yet for sufficient safeguards without undue interference from the private sector.

Here are other AI stories of note from the past few days:

  • OpenAI’s trust and safety head steps down: Dave Willner, an industry veteran who was OpenAI’s head of trust and safety, announced in a post on LinkedIn that he’s left the job and transitioned to an advisory role. OpenAI said in a statement that it’s seeking a replacement and that CTO Mira Murati will manage the team on an interim basis.
  • Customized instructions for ChatGPT: In more OpenAI news, the company has launched custom instructions for ChatGPT users so that they don’t have to write the same instruction prompts to the chatbot every time they interact with it.
  • Google news-writing AI: Google is testing a tool that uses AI to write news stories and has started demoing it to publications, according to a new report from The New York Times. The tech giant has pitched the AI system to The New York Times, The Washington Post and The Wall Street Journal’s owner, News Corp.
  • Apple tests a ChatGPT-like chatbot: Apple is developing AI to challenge OpenAI, Google and others, according to a new report from Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman. Specifically, the tech giant has created a chatbot that some engineers are internally referring to as “Apple GPT.”
  • Meta releases Llama 2: Meta unveiled a new family of AI models, Llama 2, designed to drive apps along the lines of OpenAI’s ChatGPTBing Chat and other modern chatbots. Trained on a mix of publicly available data, Meta claims that Llama 2’s performance has improved significantly over the previous generation of Llama models.
  • Authors protest against generative AI: Generative AI systems like ChatGPT are trained on publicly available data, including books — and not all content creators are pleased with the arrangement. In an open letter signed by more than 8,500 authors of fiction, nonfiction and poetry, the tech companies behind large language models like ChatGPT, Bard, LLaMa and more are taken to task for using their writing without permission or compensation.
  • Microsoft brings Bing Chat to the enterprise: At its annual Inspire conference, Microsoft announced Bing Chat Enterprise, a version of its Bing Chat AI-powered chatbot with business-focused data privacy and governance controls. With Bing Chat Enterprise, chat data isn’t saved, Microsoft can’t view a customer’s employee or business data and customer data isn’t used to train the underlying AI models.

More machine learnings

Technically this was also a news item, but it bears mentioning here in the research section. Fable Studios, which previously made CG and 3D short films for VR and other media, showed off an AI model it calls Showrunner that (it claims) can write, direct, act in and edit an entire TV show — in their demo, it was “South Park.”

Maybe showing off an AI-generated fake TV episode during a writers’ strike is a bad idea

I’m of two minds on this. On one hand, I think pursuing this at all, let alone during a huge Hollywood strike that involves issues of compensation and AI, is in rather poor taste. Though CEO Edward Saatchi said he believes that the tool puts power in the hands of creators, the opposite is also arguable. At any rate it was not received particularly well by people in the industry.

On the other hand, if someone on the creative side (which Saatchi is) does not explore and demonstrate these capabilities, then they will be explored and demonstrated by others with less compunction about putting them to use. Even if the claims Fable makes are a bit expansive for what they actually showed (which has serious limitations), it is like the original DALL-E in that it prompted discussion and indeed worry, even though it was no replacement for a real artist. AI is going to have a place in media production one way or another — but for a whole sack of reasons it should be approached with caution.

On the policy side, a little while back we had the National Defense Authorization Act going through with (as usual) some really ridiculous policy amendments that have nothing to do with defense. But among them was one addition that the government must host an event where researchers and companies can do their best to detect AI-generated content. This kind of thing is definitely approaching “national crisis” levels, so it’s probably good this got slipped in there.

Over at Disney Research, they’re always trying to find a way to bridge the digital and the real — for park purposes, presumably. In this case they have developed a way to map virtual movements of a character or motion capture (say for a CG dog in a film) onto an actual robot, even if that robot is a different shape or size. It relies on two optimization systems, each informing the other of what is ideal and what is possible, sort of like a little ego and superego. This should make it much easier to make robot dogs act like regular dogs, but of course it’s generalizable to other stuff as well.

And here’s hoping AI can help us steer the world away from sea-bottom mining for minerals, because that is definitely a bad idea. A multi-institutional study put AI’s ability to sift signal from noise to work predicting the location of valuable minerals around the globe. As they write in the abstract:

In this work, we embrace the complexity and inherent “messiness” of our planet’s intertwined geological, chemical, and biological systems by employing machine learning to characterize patterns embedded in the multidimensionality of mineral occurrence and associations.

The study actually predicted and verified locations of uranium, lithium, and other valuable minerals. And how about this for a closing line: The system “will enhance our understanding of mineralization and mineralizing environments on Earth, across our solar system, and through deep time.” Awesome.

More TechCrunch

For the college students who are satisfied with dating apps, which may not be many, Tinder announced Wednesday a series of updates to Tinder U, its in-app feature that caters…

Tinder update targets college students as dating apps struggle

Once linked, parents will be alerted to their teen’s channel activity, including the number of uploads, subscriptions and comments.

YouTube debuts new parental controls aimed at teens

The exact contents of X’s (now permanent) undertaking with the DPC have not been made public, but it’s assumed the agreement limits how it can use people’s data.

Ireland’s privacy watchdog ends legal fight with X over data use for AI after it agrees to permanent limits

Years ago, Twitter tried but eventually walked away from building TV apps after getting a lukewarm reception. Now, as it looks to revive its advertising business, its new incarnation X…

X doubles down on video with a new TV app

Apple is likely to unveil its iPhone 16 series of phones and maybe even some Apple Watches at its Glowtime event on September 9.

Apple event 2024: How to watch the iPhone 16 launch

Korea’s Institute of Machinery and Materials this week showcased a robotic wheelchair with large, deformable wheels that can manage rocks, stairs and other obstacles. During normal operation, the wheel maintains…

Watch this robotic wheelchair’s compliant wheels take on bumps, rocks and stairs

Mayfield is launching AI Garage, a $100 million initiative for ideation-stage founders interested in building “AI teammate” companies.

Mayfield allocates $100M to AI incubator modeled after its entrepreneur-in-residence program

Anthropic is launching a new subscription plan for its AI chatbot, Claude, catered towards enterprise customers that want more administrative controls and increased security. Claude Enterprise will compete with OpenAI’s…

Anthropic launches Claude Enterprise plan to compete with OpenAI

Time is running out to take advantage of our Student Pass discount for TechCrunch Disrupt 2024. Students and recent graduates can still save up to $200 until September 6 at…

Students and recent grads: Only 3 days left to save on TechCrunch Disrupt 2024 Student Passes

Fast-forward to today, Slauson & Co. remains even more committed to the mission of inclusivity in its funding, and it seems limited partners have its back. 

Slauson & Co. raises $100M Fund II proving appetite for inclusion persists

Safe Superintelligence (SSI), the AI startup co-founded by former OpenAI chief scientist Ilya Sutskever, has raised over $1 billion in capital from investors including NFDG (an investment partnership run by…

Ilya Sutskever’s startup, Safe Superintelligence, raises $1B

The American sports betting market produced $10.9 billion in revenue in 2023 for casinos, sportsbooks and iGaming, according to the American Gambling Association. One of the reasons this industry is…

DubClub wants amateur sports bettors to win more

New climate tech VC firms have emerged in recent years, but existing ones are also raising larger funds. Founded in 2007, Dutch firm SET Ventures is one of the latter.…

Dutch clean energy investor SET Ventures lands new €200 million fund, which will go toward digital tech

Revefi connects to a company’s data stores and databases (e.g. Snowflake, Databricks and so on) and attempts to automatically detect and troubleshoot data-related issues.

Revefi seeks to automate companies’ data operations

If you build an AI search product, you compete with Google. But Google has a lot easier time answering queries with a single, simple answer, such as “how many is…

You.com ‘refocuses’ from AI search to deeper productivity agents with new $50M round

Featured Article

reMarkable’s Paper Pro adds color, light and more but keeps the focus on ‘focus’

The $499 Paper Pro — a new naming convention to indicate it is a higher-end alternative to the now-$379 reMarkable 2, not a direct successor — is momentous for its addition of both color and a “frontlight,” though both features are what you might call muted.

reMarkable’s Paper Pro adds color, light and more but keeps the focus on ‘focus’

Good news for Microsoft: The U.K.’s antitrust regulator says that the tech titan’s high-profile acquihire of the team behind AI startup Inflection doesn’t cause competition concerns, and thus it won’t…

UK regulator greenlights Microsoft’s Inflection acquihire, but also designates it a merger

In the summer of 2023, Lyft was contemplating the sale of its micromobility business after receiving strong interest from prospective buyers. Today, the ride-hail company is doubling down on its…

Why Lyft’s CEO says ‘it would be insane’ not to go all in on bikeshare

Here’s a look at what’s going to change with Siri, and what the introduction of Apple Intelligence will allow you to do with the digital assistant. 

How Apple Intelligence is changing the way you use Siri on your iPhone 

Apple Intelligence was designed to leverage things that generative AI already does well, like text and image generation, to improve upon existing features.

What is Apple Intelligence, when is it coming and who will get it?

Spotify is launching daylist globally. It’s a personalized playlist that evolves throughout the day depending on your listening habits. This rollout comes after the company introduced it first to English-speaking…

Spotify launches its evolving playlist, daylist, globally

Digital lending platforms have become an easy and swift alternative source of credit for microenterprises and individuals overlooked by traditional banking institutions. These platforms have turned into a lifeline for…

Impact investors FMO and BlueOrchard back Ghana’s digital lender Fido in $30M Series B round

Indian online pharmacy startup PharmEasy, once valued at a lofty $5.6 billion, is still about 92% below its peak valuation, according to new estimates by its investor Janus Henderson. The…

PharmEasy still 92% below its peak $5.6 billion valuation, investor estimates

Palm launched in 2023 with the goal of making cash management for enterprise treasury teams easier.

From their experiences at Uber and PayPal, Palm founders want to make moving cash easier for big companies

Canva, the design platform, is increasing prices steeply for some customers. And it’s blaming the move in part on generative AI. In the U.S., some Canva Teams subscribers on older…

Canva has increased prices for its Teams product

Featured Article

Apple Event 2024: iPhone 16, Apple Intelligence and all the other expected ‘Glowtime’ reveals

Apple’s Glowtime iPhone event will include the iPhone 16, but may also feature new AirPods, a new Apple Watch and possibly even new Macs.

Apple Event 2024: iPhone 16, Apple Intelligence and all the other expected ‘Glowtime’ reveals

Snap is testing a “simplified version of Snapchat,” CEO Evan Spiegel wrote in a verbose letter to employees published on Snap’s website Tuesday. The CEO says the simplified version aims…

Snapchat to test a ‘simplified’  app, CEO says

Prevention is better than cure, as the saying goes. Today, a splashy startup that has taken that concept to heart — literally and figuratively — is expanding. Neko Health was…

Neko Health, the body-scanning AI health startup from Spotify’s Daniel Ek, opens in London

The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) published a report about increasing fraud at Bitcoin ATMs. These ATMs allow people to turn their cash into crypto, but they’ve become a tool for…

Bitcoin ATMs are a hotbed for scams, FTC says

Volkswagen is taking its ChatGPT voice assistant experiment on the road. Or more specifically, to vehicles it sells in the United States.  The German automaker announced in January at CES…

Volkswagen is rolling out its ChatGPT assistant to the US