Democrats wanted an agreement on using artificial intelligence. It went nowhere

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Artificial Intelligence News

Elections,Democratic National Convention,Joe Biden

As campaigns nationwide experimented with artificial intelligence earlier this year, the Democratic National Committee approached their committees with a request: Sign onto guidelines to use the technology in a “responsible” way. The draft agreement, a copy of which was obtained by The Associated Press, was hardly full of revolutionary ideas.

FILE - President Joe Biden is photographed by participants after delivering a speech commemorating Martin Luther King, Jr., Day, Monday, Jan. 16, 2023, in Washington. FILE - Democratic National Committee Chairman Jaime Harrison films a video encouraging people to vote in South Carolina’s lead-off Democratic presidential primary on Saturday, Feb. 3, 2024, in Columbia, S.C. FILE - President Joe Biden is photographed by participants after delivering a speech commemorating Martin Luther King, Jr.

The DNC, she said, “will continue to engage with our sister committees to discuss ideas and issues important to Democratic campaigns and to American voters, including AI.” In the absence of regulation, the DNC sought a set of guidelines it could point to as evidence the party was taking seriously the threat and promise of AI. It sent the proposal in March to the five Democratic campaign committees that seek to elect House, Senate, gubernatorial, state legislative and state attorneys general candidates to office, according to the draft agreement.

And it might send the wrong message to technology companies and executives who work on AI, many of whom help fill campaign coffers during election years. The DNC plan caught the committees off guard because it came with little explanation, other than a desire to get each committee to agree to the list of best practices within a few days, said multiple Democratic operatives who spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to discuss the matter. Aides to the Democratic Congressional Campaign and Democratic Senatorial Campaign committees said they felt rushed by a DNC timeline that urged them to sign quickly.

 

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