Senators aim to boost AI knowledge with study sessions on fast-growing technology
Others are more broadly opposed to regulating AI. Adam Thierer of the R Street Institute told the Washington Examiner, “Artificial intelligence policy now threatens to become an all-out war on computation as regulatory schemes take aim at every layer of the production stack, including AI apps, models, chips, and even data centers.”
Because AI stretches across so many industries — online applications in search, content creation, education, healthcare uses, customer service, and many, many more — the regulatory reach may be similarly limitless. Any plan this early in the life of the technology is bound to be broad and vague.
“The code cops are coming for AI, and it’s a nightmare scenario for American competitiveness and consumers,” Thierer warned.