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V-I's avatar

"This service is known to the state of California to contain inauthentic content" stickers on everything.

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Brian Moore's avatar

I think this objectively a point in favor of the "don't regulate AI because the gov always screws things up" crowd. I don't 100% necessarily agree, and I think there probably are good regulations to consider, but it does show the strength of the "the gov will screw it up" card in the AI-policy-deckbuilding-game. And the fallacy that most people have of "regulation" as a Sim City style slider where if you go to 0, it costs no money and doesn't work, and if you push it up to 10 (or 11) it costs lots of money and definitely works.

I think what it does show, as far as strategy, is that if you want good AI regulation, you should not just say those words, but positively say "we want *THIS* good AI regulation with *these* key features" and as-efficient-as-possible-soundbites about what those features are. And also go on to publicly slag (as this post does well) alternative proposals (like this bill) that are obviously dumb "we just heard about this AI thing yesterday" kind of stuff.

AI as a political issue is too new for pols to have implicit understandings of the tradeoffs - unlike say, gun control, where pols understand that pro-gun-control voters will not support "take guns away from the army!" and anti-gun-control voters will not support "give free guns to convicted murderers."

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