-
Mashup Score: 8AI Nationalism(s): Global Industrial Policy Approaches to AI - 2 month(s) ago
Our latest report diagnoses concentration of power in the tech industry as a pressing challenge – and points the path forward to seize this moment of change.
Source: ainowinstitute.orgCategories: General Medicine News, Future of MedicineTweet
-
Mashup Score: 7Setting the digital future's agenda - 3 month(s) ago
The White House. | Francis Chung/E & E News The White House’s Office of Science and Technology Policy has a new taxonomy of “critical and emerging technologies” on which it wants federal agencies to focus. Or rather, an updated one. The list published late Tuesday night revamps and expands on a document last revised in 2022, by regrouping and reclassifying some of the cutting-edge technologies in question and adding a focus on data privacy and cybersecurity. The document’s priorities are not mandates,
Source: www.politico.comCategories: General Medicine News, Future of MedicineTweet
-
Mashup Score: 10What can we learn from the FDA model for AI regulation? - 3 month(s) ago
After holding a rapid deliberation late last year that convened deep experts on the FDA alongside key participants in the AI policy debate, we pulled together several immediate insights into a memo. Though it was clear the path forward isn’t to port over any single regulatory model wholesale, hosting a deep dive into the Food […]
Source: ainowinstitute.orgCategories: General Medicine News, Future of MedicineTweet
-
Mashup Score: 4Toxic Competition: Regulating Big Tech’s Data Advantage - 5 month(s) ago
One of the key sources of tech firms’ power is their data advantage. Privacy and competition law are two tools that, used in concert, can effectively curb this source of some of tech firms’ most harmful behavior. Doing so requires strategic calibration of the effects of each on digital markets and on the broader public, […]
Source: ainowinstitute.orgCategories: General Medicine News, Future of MedicineTweet
-
Mashup Score: 59Interoperability, Privacy, & Security - 5 month(s) ago
In the face of concerns about anticompetitive conduct, companies may claim privacy and security reasons as justifications for refusing to have their products and services interoperate with other co
Source: www.ftc.govCategories: General Medicine News, Future of MedicineTweet
-
Mashup Score: 58Science Committee Leaders Stress Importance of Diligence in NIST AI Safety Research Funding - 5 month(s) ago
(WASHINGTON, DC) – Yesterday, House Science, Space, and Technology Committee Chairman Frank Lucas (R-OK) and Ranking Member Zoe Lofgren (D-CA) sent a letter to the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Director Laurie Locascio regarding the establishment of the Artificial Intelligence Safety Institute (AISI) at NIST. Subcommittee on Research and Technology Chairman Mike Collins…
Source: science.house.govCategories: General Medicine News, Future of MedicineTweet
-
Mashup Score: 42FTC Policy Statement on Unfairness - 5 month(s) ago
Appended to International Harvester Co., 104 F.T.C. 949, 1070 (1984). See 15 U.S.C. § 45(n).
Source: www.ftc.govCategories: General Medicine News, Future of MedicineTweet
-
Mashup Score: 354Coming face to face with Rite Aid’s allegedly unfair use of facial recognition technology - 5 month(s) ago
Rite Aid has “used facial recognition technology in its retail stores without taking reasonable steps to address the risks that its deployment of such technology was likely to result in harm to consumers as a result of false-positive facial recognition match alerts.” That’s the lawyerly language of the FTC’s just-filed action against drug store chain Rite Aid and a subsidiary. Put in more common parlance, the FTC alleges that Rite Aid launched an inadequately tested and operationally deficient covert surveillance program against its customers without considering the impact that its inaccurate facial recognition technology would have on people wrongly identified as “matching” someone on the company’s watchlist database. Among other things, a proposed settlement in the case would ban Rite Aid from using any facial recognition system for security or surveillance purposes for five years.
Source: www.ftc.govCategories: General Medicine News, Future of MedicineTweet
-
Mashup Score: 15The New Invisible Hand? The Impact of Algorithms on Competition and Consumer Rights | United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary - 5 month(s) ago
United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary
Source: www.judiciary.senate.govCategories: General Medicine News, Future of MedicineTweet
-
Mashup Score: 109Make no mistake—AI is owned by Big Tech - 5 month(s) ago
If we’re not careful, Microsoft, Amazon, and other large companies will leverage their position to set the policy agenda for AI, as they have in many other sectors.
Source: www.technologyreview.comCategories: General Medicine News, Future of MedicineTweet
@SusannahGlickm1 @ambaonadventure @sarahbmyers @maxvonthun @pandayjyoti @bulletprooflama @halcyene @SandraDMax @outvertigo With gratitude to all of our contributors, we are excited to introduce this new stream of work critiquing current industrial policy approaches, and guiding them toward an incisive vision of the public interest. More soon! Read the full collection: https://t.co/yyoE1Ytdmi