OpenAI is exploring collective decisions on AI, like Wikipedia entries
ChatGPT's creator OpenAI is testing how to gather broad input on decisions impacting its artificial intelligence, its president Greg Brockman said on Monday. Another idea that Brockman discussed, on which OpenAI elaborated in a blog post Monday, is that governments around the world should coordinate to ensure AI is developed safely. He and OpenAI said a body like the International Atomic Energy Agency could place restrictions on deployment, vet compliance with safety standards and track usage of computing power. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman proposed various ideas to U.S. lawmakers last week for setting guardrails for artificial intelligence, among them requiring licenses to develop the most sophisticated AI models and establishing a related governance regime.
Discover Related

Sam Altman's OpenAI says ChatGPT's weekly users have grown to 200 million

ChatGPT maker OpenAI partners with US military in big AI usage policy revamp

OpenAI Wants Everyone to Build Their Own Version of ChatGPT

OpenAI CEO says ChatGPT maker is staying private to make ‘strange’ decisions

Regulation ‘critical’ to curb risk posed by AI, boss of ChatGPT tells Congress

OpenAI's ChatGPT, launched last week, used by over 1 million in 6 days: CEO
