The OECD delegation discussed the benefits of Artificial Intelligence and pushed for regulation and democratization.
Delegations from the United States, Spain, the United Kingdom, Japan and India on Monday highlighted the benefits of artificial intelligence (AI) in addressing challenges such as the climate, health and education crises, but also called for the creation of regulations. both nationally and internationally.
The European Union started work on AI regularization in 2019 and is already in the “final stages.” But globally, that all changed with the popularity of OpenAI’s generative AI chatbot, ChatGPT, which gained popularity late last year.
The Spanish politician stressed that these companies are very interested in countries legislating on possible problems with artificial intelligence, because “society must trust that these tools are safe and do not lie.”
Another thing agreed upon by the speakers at the conference which took place at the National Library Headquarters was that this technology must reach everyone and be impartial.
Regarding impartiality, OECD Deputy Secretary General Urik Knudsen highlighted that there is a significant gender imbalance in AI companies and explained his idea by pointing out that, although the majority of AI CEOs in this type of companies are men, the voice of intelligent assistants such as Apple’s Siri or Alexa from Amazon is female.
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