> Could you give some specific examples of AI regulations that you think would be good?
Sure, I can give you some examples:
- deceiving someone into thinking they're talking to a human should be a felony (prison time, no exceptions for corporations)
- ban government/law-enforcement use of AI for surveillance, predictive policing or automated sentencing
- no closed-source AI allowed in any public institution (schools, hospitals, courts...)
- no selling or renting paid AI products to anyone under 16 (free tools only)
I like where you're going. How about we just ban closed source software of any kind from public institutions?
> - deceiving someone into thinking they're talking to a human
This is gonna be as enforceable as the CANSPAM act. (i.e. you will get a few big cases, but it's nothing compared to the overall situation)
How do you proof it in court? Do we need to record all private conversations?