The AI Daily Brief: Artificial Intelligence News and Analysis - DOGE and How AI Could Infiltrate the US Government
Episode Date: November 14, 2024Explore the newly proposed Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) and its potential to transform U.S. government operations with AI. Appointed by President-Elect Trump, Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswa...my are set to lead this agency, focusing on cutting government waste and increasing efficiency. Brought to you by: Vanta - Simplify compliance - vanta.com/nlwThe AI Daily Brief helps you understand the most important news and discussions in AI. Subscribe to the podcast version of The AI Daily Brief wherever you listen: https://pod.link/1680633614 Subscribe to the newsletter: https://aidailybrief.beehiiv.com/ Join our Discord: https://bit.ly/aibreakdown
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Today on the AI Daily Brief, what this new Doge thing means for AI.
The AI Daily Brief is a daily video and podcast about the most important news and discussions in AI.
To join the conversation, follow the Discord link in our show notes.
Welcome back to the AI Daily Brief Headlines edition, all the daily AI news you need in around five minutes.
We kick off today with a story from OpenAI that bucks the trend that we have been seeing recently of executives leaving with an executive coming back.
Greg Brockman, it turns out, was just on sabbatical. He was not free-leaving the company.
And as of yesterday, he tweeted, longest vacation of my life complete, back to building at OpenAI.
According to reports, Brockman told staff that he had been working with Sam Altman to create a new role for him
focused on addressing significant technical challenges at the company. One of the points of discussion during Brockman's time away
was how he did or didn't fit within the changing Open AI executive landscape.
Brockman is a much more hands-on builder than he is a manager, and it wasn't clear exactly how that was
fitting in. The information and others had reported that there were some tensions with his leadership
style, and so Bloomberg's report that Brockman had been working with Altman to create a new role
makes sense based on that. Now, of course, in spite of all that, Brockman does return to a
dramatically transformed company. Half a dozen senior staffers have left during his leave,
including CTO Mira Muradi and co-founder John Schulman. Newly appointed CFO, Sarah Friar,
focusing the company on commercial applications of AI, and of course the company is looking to ship
a new generation of models, which have been marred with questions about a slowdown of progress.
Brockman is now one of three out of 11 co-founders remaining at the company, and by and large,
people are pretty excited. AI for success on Twitter writes, Greg Brockman is back,
AGI just got a day closer.
Speaking of Miramiradi, we also got some reports around what she's doing now.
The information writes ex-open AI CTO Muradi's new team takes shape.
Almost immediately upon leaving the company Miramaradi
had reportedly begun to pitch other OpenAI employees
about joining what she was building.
It appears that some have taken her up on that offer,
including Mianna Chen,
a research program manager at OpenAI who worked on preparing AI models for release,
X head of post-training Barrett Zof,
and former senior researcher Luke Metz.
The information writes,
Chen's loss is particularly significant
given that she led the launches of a number of OpenAI's models
and products, including GPT40,
01 reasoning models, and advanced voice mode.
Still at the same time, we just don't know what Maradi's actually working on.
Whatever it is, you can bet that there will be big venture checks waiting should they decide to go that route.
News from another one of the big players, Amazon has announced a massive grants program to lure AI researchers to their hardware.
Called Build on Trainium, the program will award 110 million in credits and grants.
Partner universities can access 11 million in credits each, while individual grants of up to 500,000 will be available to the broader AI research community.
AWS also said that they are establishing a research cluster of 40,000 Trayium chips that will be available for research teams and students.
Gatti Hutt, Senior Director at Annapurna Labs, the AWS chipmaking division said,
AI academic research today is severely bottlenecked by a lack of resources, and as such, the academic sector is falling quickly behind.
With build on tranium, AWS is investing in a new wave of AI research guided by leading AI research in universities
that will advance the state of generative AI applications, libraries, and optimizations.
The problem is fairly stark when you consider the numbers.
Meta's training cluster used for their frontier models houses 100,000 GPUs,
whereas Stanford's Natural Language Processing Group has 68 GPUs for all of its work.
Still not everyone is happy to see the expansion of resources driven by a large corporation.
Oss Keys, a PhD candidate at the University of Washington who studies the ethical impact
of emerging technologies, told TechCrunch,
this feels like an effort on generalizing a corruption of academic research funding.
Then again, this is really just part of the process.
By 2020, 70% of AI PhDs already ended up working in private industry, in part due to the
necessary access to compute. The number of papers with industry co-authors has nearly doubled since 2000,
and while the government is taking steps to address the issue, like the National Science Foundation's
$140 million investment to launch seven university-led national AI research institutes,
it still seems like this sort of collaboration is just going to be the way that things work
going forward. Lastly today, another big fundraise for an AI unicorn. Writer has raised two
$200 million at a $1.9 billion valuation. Writer is firmly in the enterprise realm, with CEO
May Habib saying, at Ryder, we're not just creating LLMs that can execute tasks, but developing
advanced AI systems that deliver mission-critical enterprise work. With this new funding, we're
laser-focused on developing the next generation of autonomous AI solutions that are secure,
reliable, and adaptable, and highly complex real-world enterprise scenarios. With that, we wrap
today's AI Daily Brief Headlines edition. Next up, the main episode.
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And now, back to the show.
Welcome back to the AI Daily Brief.
Today we are talking about the new Department of Government efficiency
and what the implications are for artificial intelligence.
And just before we get into this one quick caveat,
the AI Daily Brief is obviously not a political show.
We've done a little bit more political coverage recently,
simply based on the fact of the elections
and all the discourse surrounding what a new administration means for AI.
But by and large, the way that I see this show is we are about one,
technology advancements and actually how.
helping you understand what's changing about the technology itself. And two, real-world implications
with an emphasis on business. We talk a lot, obviously, about how companies are using AI, how they're
thinking about integrating it, what it means for the structure of different industries. In a distant
third is the policy surrounding AI. Now, we do cover it because obviously it's going to have a
deterministic impact on how AI shakes out, but in most circumstances, it's not where I want
the emphasis to be. However, for the purposes of today's conversation, I actually think that there are
enough people talking about what this new Doge thing means for AI. So first of all, what the heck
am I talking about? Yesterday, an announcement started floating around X that many people thought
at first was a joke. Basically, it said that President-elect Trump was appointing Elon Musk and Vivek
Ramoswamy to lead something new called the Department of Government Efficiency. The statement read,
together these two wonderful Americans will pave the way from my administration to dismantle
government bureaucracy slash excess regulations, cut wasteful expenditures, and restructure federal
agencies. This will send shockwaves through the system and anyone involved in government waste, which is a lot of people.
Trump went so far as to call this potentially the Manhattan Project of Our Time. He said that Republicans
have dreamed about the idea of being able to effectively take a wrecking ball to bureaucracy for a long time,
and that this was the opportunity. He even gave it a little bit of symbolic chutzpah when he
proclaimed that the work would conclude no later than July 4th, 26, which is the 250th anniversary of
the Declaration of Independence. Of course, a lot of the discussion initially was about the name. The
acronym for the Department of Government Efficiency is Doge, which is, of course, the original crypto meme
coin, and something that Elon Musk has long had a flirtation and, frankly, a love for. However, it's also
quite clear that the initiative as a whole is not being treated as a meme. Vivek for his part is giving
up the chance to be appointed to the Senate in order to run this thing. Elon has been talking about
this for some time. In one of his many interviews recently, he said there are around 428 federal
agencies. There's so many that people have never even heard of. I think we should be able to get away
with 99 agencies.
Anyway, the point being that this is a real thing.
Now, it strikes me that there are likely to be two phases of this.
The first phase inevitably is going to be about some amount of cutting, and just going through
and trying to find areas where there's opportunities to slash.
If you go cruise around Twitter or X, it's basically a crowdsource list of all the things
that people find wasteful.
However, if the first phase is all about just rooting out where there's potential waste,
it seems inevitable that the question of how to make what's left more efficient is going
to arise as well.
And that, my friends, is where AI enters the discourse.
AI policy reaches Miles Brandage writes,
surprised not to see more discussion of the intersection of Doge and AI,
as in the heavy lifting of cost reduction seems like Medicare and Medicaid
rather than a bunch of small things.
And that raises the question of whether AI could help on those big ticket items.
Miles points out that, quote,
Doge will coincide time-wise over the next two years with AI surpassing human expert
performance on a very wide range of medical and administrative tasks.
Why Combinator Partner Harstegar writes,
AI is great at automating repetitive
work and the government needs to produce spending.
Combine those two ideas and now could be a great time
to build software to make the government run more efficiently.
Yisi would love to fund any builders up for the challenge.
Lawrence Muir writes,
If I had to take a guess at a Doge idea,
the IRS could be in large part eliminated
by a combination of a flat tax and fraud detection audit software
powered by AI that's akin to what PayPal used.
Makes returns much easier to incentivize evasion,
automate the process.
AI entrepreneur bin Ureides also pointed to health care saying,
Healthcare is exorbitantly expensive and supremely inefficient in America.
This is a combination of corruption, red tape cabals who restrict licenses and onerous regulation.
Now, of course, not everyone is excited about this.
Ali al-Katib writes, per recent Doge news, my guess is Elon and Vivek will most likely turn
to AI and tech companies for contracts to swap out bureaucrats for algorithmic systems
in an attempt to retain the sprawling power of an authoritarian state with less of a headcount.
Now, even beyond Doge, there's also a lot of discourse going around right now around how Elon has
the ear of the president and what it means specifically for artificial intelligence. On Sunday, CNN wrote,
Elon Musk exerts deepening influence on Donald Trump's presidential transition. Quote, Donald Trump's
Mara Lago Club has been brimming in the last 48 hours with two kinds of people, those angling for a job
in the president-elects incoming administration, and those trying to influence him into hiring their
picks for the top spots. But the one person who has loomed over at all and has exerted a great deal of
influence is Elon Musk, according to multiple sources. The tech billionaire has been seen at the resort in Palm
Beach, Florida almost every day since Trump won the election last week, dining with him on the patio
some evenings and hanging out with his family Sunday at the golf course. On November 11th, the Verge published
The push for Elon Musk to lead American AI policy is already starting. The story is specifically
about a public petition from the Americans for Responsible Innovation for Trump to make Elon Musk his
special advisor on AI. The ARI is led by former Democratic Representative Brad Carson and said in the petition
that, quote, no one is better equipped to help the Trump administration make America a lead on AI than
Elon Musk. Interestingly, part of the reason for this is Elon's consideration of AI safety issues.
ARI policy analyst David Robusto wrote in a blog post recently, Musk could emerge as a champion for
AI safety in the administration. They pointed to, for example, his public support of California's
SB 1047, which ultimately California Governor Gavin Newsom vetoed. Of course, there are some conflict
of interest issues given that Elon runs a big AI lab. Alex Cantorowitz of the Big Technology
podcast writes, just imagine Sam Altman walking into the White House.
for a conversation about AI regulation next year only to see Elon Musk sitting across the table.
Still, hold aside all that and come back to these question of Doge.
And mostly from entrepreneurial circles, there is just tons of excitement.
J.T. writes, what if Doge becomes the largest application of AI agents in history?
Agents could analyze budgets, process complaints, identify ineffective rules and regulations,
automated administrative tasks, etc. There's a real chance at modernization here.
Going out even more broadly, A16Z partner Shariaam Krishna and writes,
It's vibe shift.
I think this is one of the most exciting times to build new things.
From media to how AI can change existing industries or making government efficient, there's a tangible excitement in the air.
And while I think there are plenty of folks who are still reeling from last week's election results and, of course, a huge variety of opinions about this new administration, when it comes to the entrepreneurship vibe, I think that's dead on.
So will we see the Department of Government efficiency be the way that AI infiltrates the U.S. government?
only time will tell.
For now, that's going to do it for today's AI Daily Brief.
Appreciate you listening as always, and until next time, peace.
