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by nimbius
784 days ago
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"If, back in the 70s, Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak had to guarantee that their computers would not be used for serious crimes, would they have been willing to sign with potential jail time on the line? Would they have even bothered to found Apple?" back in the 70s computer crime was not technically possible or even really feasible in the way we see it today. we didnt have an internet until the 80s. what we have with AI is wholesale development, integration, and execution in our everyday lives across numerous platforms and services. its used in bill pay, litigation, even war. we absolutely do need legislation to protect and secure regular people from it. this feels like a classic case of having your cake and eat it too. Either AI is a very powerful tool for humanity and thus would naturally require a regulatory framework around it to ensure its proper use and application, or its a buzzword hyped up by SEO's and marketing teams to make people think a handful of big companies that ran out of steam 20 years ago still have the potential to innovate stuff. |
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Do you think that because personal computers & the internet took a while to develop, states like California missed an opportunity to helpfully regulate them by forcing their makers to attest to their safety before product development (much less public release) gets underway? Should we add that sort of regulation, now?
A new website could be harmful – used for "serious crimes", "bill pay", "litigation", "even war"! Should every new website require filing paperwork guaranteeing its safety with a Calfornia Department of Technology division before going live? (There were oppressive regimes that tried to control presses, printers/fax-machines, & websites like this, using "safety" rationales!)
The mere fact a new technology is a "powerful tool for humanity" is not something that must "naturally require" a novel state-bureaucracy-run "regulatory framework around it to ensure its proper use and application".
The state in general, and the State of California in particular, is not our wise cloud-father with the foresight & disinterest to do what's best for us. It's instead a clumsy and often-corrupted tool for solving some common-coordination problems.
States usually do best when addressing a well-understood common history of specific problems & market-failures – rather than improvising new filing requirements against theoretical fears, as here.
Any new "very powerful tool for humanity" deserves the same freedom from prior restraint, & forebearance from premature budens that mostly benefit incumbents and large players, that prior technological innovations enjoyed.