Everyday AI Podcast – An AI and ChatGPT Podcast - EP 64: Big Tech and US Government Reach Agreement on AI

Episode Date: July 24, 2023

The first major AI agreement between Big Tech and the US government is finally here. So how will this new agreement affect us all? Today we take a deep dive and discuss.Newsletter: Sign-up for our fre...e daily newsletterMore on this: Episode PageJoin the discussion: Ask Jordan about The Big Tech and US Government agreementUpcoming Episodes: Check out the upcoming Everyday AI Livestream lineupWebsite: YourEverydayAI.comEmail The Show: info@youreverydayai.comConnect with Jordan on LinkedInTime Stamps:[00:00:17] New big tech agreement with US government[00:05:11] Tech giants meet with White House, discuss AI[00:09:13] Leading big tech companies creating generative AI chats[00:13:04] AI chats: Reporting, guardrails, risks, biases, privacy[00:17:01] Unofficial sheriffs in tech, EU leads regulation[00:19:37] Government lacks understanding of Internet, AI[00:23:23] AI-generated Trump voice used in political commercial. Concerns arise about AI and DeepfakesTopics Covered in This Episode:- Discussion of the new agreement between big tech and the United States government- Mention of Forbes article on generative AI vs. traditional AI- Report on the AI boom happening primarily in four states- Twitter changing its name to "X" as part of Elon Musk's consolidation effort- Launch of the WorldCoin project by Sam Altman from OpenAI- Encouragement to sign up for the newsletter and access more news and updates- Meeting between tech giants and the White House on AI- Noting that the agreement is a voluntary pledge- Attendance of several big tech companies and absence of some notable CEOs- Curiosity about the absence of certain CEOs and speculation on their intentions- Noting that the attending companies are leaders in generative AI technology- Mention of open remarks by President Biden and a closed-door sessionKeywords:new AI agreement, big tech, United States government, generative AI, traditional AI, report, Axios, AI boom, states, Twitter, Elon Musk, Sam Altman, OpenAI, WorldCoin project, universal basic income, GPT technology, meeting, White House, tech giants, voluntary pledge, legislation, government regulation, big tech companies, CEO, Sundar Pichai, Meta, Mark Zuckerberg, Elon Musk, absence, deliberate decision, leaders, generative AI technology, open remarks, President Biden, closed-door session.Send Everyday AI and Jordan a text message. (We can't reply back unless you leave contact info) Start Here ▶️Not sure where to start when it comes to AI? Start with our Start Here Series. You can listen to the first drop -- Episode 691 -- or get free access to our Inner Cricle community and all episodes: StartHereSeries.com Also, here's a link to the entire series on a Spotify playlist. 

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is the Everyday AI Show, the Everyday Podcast where we simplify AI and bring its power to your fingertips. Listen daily for practical advice to boost your career, business, and everyday life. Meet Firefly AI Assistant, now live in Adobe Firefly, the All In One Creative AI Studio. Just describe what you want to create and the assistant handles the rest, orchestrating multi-step workflows across Photoshop, Premiere Express, and more in one conversational interface. You direct the outcome. The assistant accelerates execution. How will the new agreement between big tech and the United States government affect us all?
Starting point is 00:00:54 That's one of the questions that we're going to be talking about today on everyday AI. This is your daily live stream podcast and free daily newsletter, helping everyday people like you and me, not just learn what's going on in the world of AI, but how we can actually leverage. French it. All right. So before we get started, and as a reminder, if you are joining us live, please jump in, ask a question. It's just going to be you and I talking about this big news today. So please, let's talk about it together. And as a reminder, if you are listening to us on the podcast, check the show notes, not just for some super helpful links, but also we'll link back to so you can join future live streams. It's always best to learn together. So before we talk,
Starting point is 00:01:42 about some of those things actually I'm gonna go ahead and and plug one thing because I can it's it's my show so I can I can plug things so we haven't talked about this too much on the show but as a reminder go to the your everyday AI dot com homepage don't just sign up for the newsletter while you're there also sign up for our contests because we're gonna be giving away six months of chat GPT plus and one-on-one training so if you haven't done that already please make sure to do it. So before we talk about this big kind of AI and government kind of marriage, let's first talk about what's going on in the world of AI news. It's something that we do every
Starting point is 00:02:23 single weekday, Monday through Friday, 7.30 a.m. Central Standard Time. So the first thing, though, it's actually a very useful resource that we're going to be putting out in the newsletter today. But Forbes has a great article breaking down the difference between, generally A.I. And more of traditional AI. So, you know, for the most part, we talk about generative AI on the show and that definition is kind of ever changing. So make sure that you check out that article in the newsletter. Next, a new Axios report shows that essentially the whole AI boom is happening in four states. We can all kind of assume that California is one of them, right? Goes without saying. But what are the other three? Make sure to check
Starting point is 00:03:08 that out in the newsletter. A couple, couple big companies making sense. some big announcement. So first, Twitter, the social media app that most of us know and love, is not Twitter anymore. It's actually just called X. So this is interesting. And yes, this is social media news, but it's also a little bit AI news as well. Here's why. So Elon Musk has said that, yes, Twitter will be called X. He's already unveiled the new logo and they're going to be getting rid of all the traditional Twitter. references apparently. But what's important here to think is this is also Elon Musk, his kind of push to move everything under one umbrella, which is X or X.a.I. So we'll see how the X.a.I. Project that Elon Musk announced to kind of compete with Open AI and kind of X the new Twitter name, we'll see how those two things relate to each other or if they do it all. Another big one, speaking of big name. So Sam Altman, the kind of head person in charge at OpenAI, has officially
Starting point is 00:04:20 unveiled his World Coin project. So this is a universal basic income project. So why is that important and what does it have to do with AI aside from the fact that it's from OpenAI's founder, Sam Altman? Well, here's what it is. And I've referenced this two or three times on the show before. So in an interview, probably about three months ago, three or four months ago when kind of chat GPT was really searching, one thing that Sam Altman said in an interview that he was worried about with chat GPT was disinformation and economic shock. So, you know, it's kind of coincidental, maybe not that Sam Altman is also pushing the WorldCloin universal basic income project when he's talking about how.
Starting point is 00:05:10 how the GPT technology and AI in general might create some economic shock. So it's something definitely to keep an eye on. All right. So not just that, much more today in our free daily newsletter. So make sure you go check that out at your everyday AI.com. Kind of have it up on the screen here. Go join the, go join our newsletter. It's every single day. We put a ton of work into it. So make sure to check that out. All right. So let's talk about the kind of main event. here. It is the tech giants of the world meeting with the White House and President Joe Biden to talk about
Starting point is 00:05:53 AI. So as a reminder, this broke kind of late Friday morning, actually right before our show. So we kind of did a split show on Friday. We talked about on the half front, we talked about how Apple was releasing essentially their kind of chat GBT, so Apple GPD, as some people are calling it, or Ajax. So that is rumored to be dropping in 2024. And it's a pretty big deal because it will bring whatever it ends up looking like, so whether it is a smarter Siri, whether we're chatting by default with Siri on our iPhones, it doesn't matter. But the reason why that's a big deal is it's going to bring the GBT technology or AI technology to two billion devices. So I think it is going to completely change how we work with our devices. But at the last second, kind of this news
Starting point is 00:06:50 broke of the seven kind of big tech companies reaching an agreement with the Biden White House. So we gave it kind of split treatment on Friday, but we're going to give it exclusive treatment for the rest of our show today. So let's talk about this. And if you're joining us live, first of all, welcome. Drop a comment, Rastafat. Thank you for joining us. Jupiter, great to have you.
Starting point is 00:07:14 But let's talk about what this means. First and foremost, this is not legislation. This is not technically even like government regulation. This is a voluntary pledge from kind of presidents and CEOs of seven companies. This is essentially an informal agreement with the White House. So that's something super important to keep in mind. This is not a law. This is not regulation.
Starting point is 00:07:47 This is not even real governance yet. So let's break it down and let's talk about who was there and what they agreed to. And also let's talk about who wasn't there. I thought that was pretty interesting. So the big companies that were in tenants was Open AI. Anthropic, which has their cloud, Cloud 2 chatbot. Google, inflection, which has their chat as well. Microsoft, Meta, and Amazon Web Services.
Starting point is 00:08:18 So it wasn't, you know, Amazon. So why did I even make that differentiation? Because there's a couple big names that you would expect to be there that weren't. So a lot of companies maybe sent their second person in charge. So notably missing from this important meeting. Google's CEO, Sundar Puchai, Mattas, Mark Zuckerberg, OpenAIs, Sam Altman. So it was kind of interesting to me. And I'd love if you are joining us live, let me know your take on that.
Starting point is 00:08:48 You know, if you're meeting with the president of the United States, yes, all these companies have a lot of things going on. But this was a somewhat closed-door session. So President Biden kind of made some open remarks with the leaders seated around the table. And then the rest of the session was closed door. But there was kind of a photo video op, kind of of of these leaders in the room. So I found it pretty interesting that some of the biggest names were missing. And also, you know, Amazon decided to send their Amazon web service kind of representative as well, not Amazon the parent company. So it was kind of interesting to see who wasn't in the room.
Starting point is 00:09:30 Question coming in, Maybrit asking was. Where was Elon? Yeah. Elon wasn't there. So yeah, no representative from Twitter, obviously. So the, it's actually, it is good to denote that. So this isn't just big tech. These are companies, for the most part, that right now are leading the push in generative AI.
Starting point is 00:09:49 So these are kind of, you know, for the most part, all of the big chats, right? So you have chat GPT. You have cloud two. You have Bard. You have Pi. You have Bing Chat. And then you have meta, which announced there. Lama 2 kind of chat in partnership with Microsoft.
Starting point is 00:10:06 So this was all for the most part, those who are creating the generative AI chats and their representatives. And then obviously Amazon Web Services, AWS, which kind of power, I think most of those platforms are on AWS. So it was, yes, interesting that Twitter was not there, right? Even though Elon has his XAI platform and also Apple. wasn't there, right? Obviously, those companies have their, have their platforms in development. And all of these other kind of companies that were represented there, they have live products.
Starting point is 00:10:45 They have products that, you know, millions of people or hundreds of millions of people are already using. So that's probably the reason why, you know, companies like, you know, X or Twitter, Apple were not in attendance just yet because these are all the publicly available chats. All right. So now that we know who was there, who wasn't, and maybe why, let's talk about what these leaders actually talked about. And more importantly, what it means for everybody people like you and me. Let's dive in.
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Starting point is 00:12:06 library of pre-built workflows for common creative tasks like batch editing photos, creating mood boards, portrait retouching, and creating social variations. Every step the assistant takes is visible so you can refine, redirect, or take over at any time. You stay in the driver's seat as the creative director. Adobe Firefly AI assistant now in public beta. See it today at firefly.adopi.com. So essentially, and we'll share, you know, this article again, here that's on the screen. There's plenty of news organizations that pick this up.
Starting point is 00:12:45 So one of the big things that came up was self-governance, right? And that piece is extremely interesting because aside from this being voluntary, this is more or less these seven companies saying, yes, we will do these things, right? That's the biggest thing. But I'm just going to go through a laundry list of the different things that they included or kind of pledged to do, right? So internal and external and external security tests, investing in cybersecurity for GPT and AI, sharing information. So being more publicly, being more public about sharing information with the public and also sharing information with the government. So both how they are obtaining all of this data and how it's actually being used.
Starting point is 00:13:43 So a little more transparency they are pledging to. Next, developing a watermarking system. That one is interesting to me because Google has obviously already announced that they will do that with images. But most of these companies are text, right? Open AI for the most part, text. Anthropic Cloud text. Google Bar, they work with some images now. Same thing with Microsoft being chat.
Starting point is 00:14:10 But for the most part, these companies generate text. So I guess there's this pledge or agreement that they will figure out a watermarking system, but they did not specify if this is going to be for text. Because if it is, I'm not sure how that will work. Because obviously you can copy and paste what you grab out of chat GPT or what you grab out of Google. barred, you can throw it in any text processor in strip all formatting, right? So I'm not sure how a watermark would work with text, but, you know, that's why these companies get paid the big bucks and we don't. All right. What else do they talk about? Reporting. So reporting about AI systems,
Starting point is 00:14:56 about what their actual capabilities and limitations are, right? Because we're always talking about what does chat GPT know? You know, people share all the time how they can jailbreak chat GPT or other AI chats, which is essentially, you know, companies build all of these AI chats with guardrails, right? And they say, hey, conversations happen between the guardrails for safety, for consistency, for all these other reasons. You know, companies build these guardrails. then it's not terribly difficult to, you know, quote unquote, jailbreak these systems
Starting point is 00:15:34 and to make them operate outside of the guide rail. So part of this pledge is these companies sharing what the guard rails are and why, right? So again, we'll see how companies adhere to this kind of self-regulation, but that is part of it. Also, another piece to denote here is prioritizing research. on risks and biases and privacy. That's another big one that I think a lot of people are rightfully concerned about because that's an issue, right? Something that we don't really keep in mind
Starting point is 00:16:17 or talk about very much with these AI chats when we bring up the fact that, yes, they may be showing bias or they may be perpetuating stereotypes is, well, all of these AI chats are built from publicly available information on the internet. And guess what, everyone? The internet has prejudice. It has stereotypes, right? So if all of these chats are essentially building their foundations on what's publicly available on the internet, it is naturally going to have biases in stereotypes. stereotypes built into these chats, right? Also, there is real human feedback on these chats. That's how they're built. But also, humans have biases. Humans have tendencies that we may not be proud of, right? So that part is tricky and it will be interesting to see how these companies are going to kind of police that, so to speak. So let's talk about what this means.
Starting point is 00:17:30 All right. We have a comment from Fabian Molina joining us from Chile. Thank you, Fabian, for joining us. So let's talk about what this means for you and I. Here's the reality. This in the end means nothing, right? This is not actual laws. This is not even real regulation, right?
Starting point is 00:17:55 Even when, you know, the two sides are coming to the table and they say, Yes, we are voluntarily pledging to do all these things, to keep our users safe, to take responsible steps forward in the development of AI. It doesn't really mean anything, right? I've talked about this on the show all the time. You know, what is the future of governance in AI? This is not it. This isn't it?
Starting point is 00:18:26 This is one step. But more than anything, This is symbolic. This isn't necessarily going to change anything much for users, right? I think most people refer to right now, AI or GPT development, as kind of the Wild West. So maybe this is the Wild West with an unofficial sheriff in each town, in these seven towns, you know, with OpenAI and Anthropic and Google and inflection and Microsoft meta. Amazon Web Services. So maybe there's an unofficial sheriff in town and maybe these unofficial sheriffs are having
Starting point is 00:19:07 unofficial talks. But this is nothing official in terms of governance, in terms of real steps forward in regulation. So why do I bring that up? And we talk about all the time. Other countries and other parts of the world are taking real steps forward in regulation. You know, specifically the EU has probably been leading this charge in terms of having still the freedom to use all of these systems for the most part as long as these companies adhere to rule. So the EU has kind of been pushing with their first major draft of proposed legislation, real legislation, right? You know, and Maybrit here saying totally, I do think it builds trust with the EU, for example,
Starting point is 00:19:58 perhaps it's a strategy to to encourage the use of AI. Absolutely. So let me talk at least here in the U.S. Why I think if nothing else, this was very symbolic. And it wasn't anything real. It wasn't anything with teeth. And I don't think anything with teeth is going to be coming anytime soon. Here's why.
Starting point is 00:20:22 Number one, the overwhelming majority of. of Congress people, of U.S. senators here in the U.S. do not understand how the Internet works, right? There's definitely exceptions, right? There's very intelligent people running our country. There's already been some proposals that have gone to committee in terms of AI governance, but nothing that is far-reaching or nothing that is encapsulating. It's very small pieces.
Starting point is 00:20:57 You know, one was, you know, kind of AI surveillance in the workplace that went to a committee. But there's been nothing about the overall governance or the overall regulation of AI of GPT technology. And probably the biggest reason I think is the majority of the people running the U.S. do not understand the Internet, let alone AI or GPT technology. All you need to do is go back and look when big kids, tech, you know, probably two years ago, you know, representatives from companies like Google, Facebook were going to testify in front of Congress. And the questions that they were receiving clearly signaled that our government does not understand even the basics of the internet, right?
Starting point is 00:21:47 So why would we expect them to understand even something more complex, such as, AI, machine learning, deep learning, the GPT technology, we shouldn't. So it's probably, if I'm being honest, it's probably for the best right now that this first symbolic step is coming forward now. Because at least right now, I don't think the U.S. is in the position to make common sense legislation. Real rules regarding AI were not there yet. although this more than anything, it is kind of marketing from both sides. It's marketing from
Starting point is 00:22:32 these seven tech companies and it's marketing from the U.S. government to say, yes, we are moving forward. We are, you know, coming to a somewhat of an agreement. You know, it's like a handshake agreement. That's all this is. So is that a good thing? Yes. Does it mean anything? No. But also, is it the right thing to do right now? Probably. Because at least right. Right now, I don't think that our lawmakers here in the U.S. have a tight enough grasp on what this technology even means to be able to properly legislate it. All right. We have a comment here coming from Ben.
Starting point is 00:23:14 Ben, thank you for writing in saying, interesting public show of support for self-governance. Sending a number two or delegate makes it easier for leaders to back off or slow walk their commitment. Absolutely, Ben. It's what we talked about at the top of the show, that some of these companies, actually, any of the big companies, right, the biggest companies in the room there were Google, Meta, Microsoft, and technically Amazon through Amazon Web Services.
Starting point is 00:23:42 And none of them sent their headperson. They sent maybe their second in charge. You know, kind of some of the smaller companies, you know, Anthropic and inflection sent their CEOs, I believe. But yes, the big companies, the household, names did not send their first person. So yes, they're their actual CEO. So that is probably so they can say at some point it's it's easier for them to to shift their trajectory. Right. So I'm glad we had this conversation almost twice, right? So like I said, this this this
Starting point is 00:24:20 kind of news broke late Friday literally minutes before we went live. And I think it was important to talk about it on Friday when it first happened and to give you all the chance to ask questions. And, you know, we put out some more great information about it in the newsletter. But I think it was important to talk about it to have its own dedicated show today. And here's why. This subject is going to constantly be coming up. You know, especially here in the U.S. We have the election cycle coming up, the 2024 election cycle.
Starting point is 00:24:53 And it's just starting to kick into high gear right now. and there are AI campaign, or not AI campaigns, but there's AI commercials, right? Even internally, right, parties going against each other, you know, I believe it was Ron DeSantis, his PAC made a commercial using an AI generated voice of former President Donald Trump. So even within the parties, right, because first in the U.S. we have our primary where the top Republican and top Democrat will come out of it. So we haven't even really started in the heat of the election cycle. That hasn't even started.
Starting point is 00:25:37 And we're already seeing AI is grabbing the headlines. And we can already see how problematic it's going to be. So that's why I thought it was important to have its own dedicated show, because especially here in the U.S., we're going to be talking about AI and deepfakes and GPD technology, you know, when it starts coming to all of our devices or, you know, two billion Apple devices across the world, we're going to be talking about GPT and AI more and more and more. So yes, this is an ongoing conversation,
Starting point is 00:26:07 but I think it was an important conversation to add. So as a reminder, thank you so much for joining us today as we talked a little bit about AI and regulation. So if you want to know more, we share every single morning. we put out a newsletter recapping, not just what we talked about in our show, but everything else that's going on in the world of AI. So we break down the AI news. We have our fresh finds, which is
Starting point is 00:26:35 essentially different happenings across the internet, new AI softwares and tools, and a daily tutorial that our team puts together. So please make sure to check that out. Go check out the contest for six free months of chat GPT Plus and free training. So I hope this was helpful to talk about govern, kind of this self-governance in AI. And I hope to see you back tomorrow and every day with everyday AI. Thanks. Meet Firefly AI assistant. Now live in Adobe Firefly, the Allman One Creative AI Studio.
Starting point is 00:27:14 Just describe what you want to create in your own words and the assistant handles the rest, orchestrating multi-step workflows across Adobe Creative Cloud apps, including Photoshop, Premiere Express, and more in one conversational interface. You direct the outcome while the assistant accelerates. execution. Stand control with the ability to step in and refine at any time. See it today at firefly.adobie.com. And that's a wrap for today's edition of Everyday AI. Thanks for joining us. If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe and leave us a rating. It helps keep us going. For a little more AI magic, visit Your EverydayAI.com and sign up to our daily newsletter so
Starting point is 00:27:59 you don't get left behind. Go break some barriers and we'll see you next time.

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