Artificial intelligence (AI) needs to be governable, able to work with humans, and consistent with current law, according to Terrell McSweeny, commissioner of the Federal Trade Commission.

“If you’re using this technology, you need to be making corresponding investments in humans that can explain what this technology is doing,” she said.

McSweeny said that companies that use algorithms to control artificial intelligence mechanisms need to be able to explain how it works so that the system can be evaluated for biased results, which has been a recent complaint of big data analytics.

“Technology is still basically a tool,” McSweeny said. “It can be used for good or it can be used for ill.”

McSweeny said that technology regulations have emphasized the need for security and privacy built into the product to protect consumers. Future regulations could enforce building ethics into the products as well.

“There aren’t any clear answers from a policy standpoint as to how we deal with ethics,” said Terah Lyons, policy adviser for the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy.

Lyons said that the most important aspect of imposing regulation is involving the public in those decisions through open workshops or public comment periods. Federal agencies also turn to interagency groups already in place to develop common guidelines on artificial intelligence.

The OSTP released an artificial intelligence report last week, which focused on the need to invest in research and development to find out what the economic and ethical impacts of artificial intelligence will be.

Forty-seven percent of jobs will be automated in the next 20 years, according to Tim O’Reilly, founder of O’Reilly Media.

However, until there are real harms done by artificial intelligence, industry leaders said that policy makers should step back and let the technology develop.

“There’s an alphabet soup of agencies and they all want in on something that’s new,” said Hilary Cain, director of technology and innovation policy at Toyota.

Cain said that before Federal agencies begin to regulate artificial intelligence, an interagency policy must be developed to ensure that the agencies are all telling the public the same rules. Cain also said the government should incentivize artificial intelligence companies that locate their headquarters in the United States.

Building the artificial intelligence workforce is critical to the U.S. economy, according to Lyons. She referenced President Obama’s CSforAll initiative, which works to bring access to computer science education to students who are underrepresented in the technology field, such as women and minorities.

The benefits of technology outweigh the need to contain it in the current economy, according to David Moschella, research fellow at CSC’s Leading Edge Forum.

“Our clients live in the dual world of machines and humans,” Moschella said. “I don’t think there’s a tension between machines and humans right now. There may be in the longer term.”

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Morgan Lynch
Morgan Lynch
Morgan Lynch is a Staff Reporter for MeriTalk covering Federal IT and K-12 Education.
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