
The Challenge of Regulating AI
The EU and U.S. diverge on AI regulation: A transatlantic comparison and steps to alignment
Both the EU and the U.S. are pivotal to the future of global artificial intelligence (AI) governance. Ensuring that their approaches to AI risk management are generally aligned will facilitate bilateral trade, improve regulatory oversight, and enable broader trans-Atlantic cooperation, Alex C. Engler argues.
-WEIRD AI: Understanding what nations include in their artificial intelligence plans
James S. Denford, Gregory S. Dawson, and Kevin C. Desouza examine the national AI strategies of countries across the globe: their elements, what drove the strategies, and if groups of culturally like-minded countries are taking the same or different approaches to AI policies.
-Artificial intelligence is another reason for a new digital agency
“Private and government oversight systems that were developed to deal with the industrial revolution are no match for the AI revolution,” writes former FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler. AI oversight requires a methodology that is as revolutionary as the technology itself, Wheeler emphasizes.