#436202 Trump CTO Addresses AI, Facial ...Michael Kratsios, the Chief Technology Officer of the United States, took the stage at Stanford University last week to field questions from Stanford’s Eileen Donahoe and attendees at the 2019 Fall Conference of the Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence (HAI). Kratsios, the fourth to hold the U.S. CTO position since its creation by President Barack Obama in 2009, was confirmed in August as President Donald Trump’s first CTO. Before joining the Trump administration, he was chief of staff at investment firm Thiel Capital and chief financial officer of hedge fund Clarium Capital. Donahoe is Executive Director of Stanford’s Global Digital Policy Incubator and served as the first U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Human Rights Council during the Obama Administration. The conversation jumped around, hitting on both accomplishments and controversies. Kratsios touted the administration’s success in fixing policy around the use of drones, its memorandum on STEM education, and an increase in funding for basic research in AI—though the magnitude of that increase wasn’t specified. He pointed out that the Trump administration’s AI policy has been a continuation of the policies of the Obama administration, and will continue to build on that foundation. As proof of this, he pointed to Trump’s signing of the American AI Initiative earlier this year. That executive order, Kratsios said, was intended to bring various government agencies together to coordinate their AI efforts and to push the idea that AI is a tool for the American worker. The AI Initiative, he noted, also took into consideration that AI will cause job displacement, and asked private companies to pledge to retrain workers. The administration, he said, is also looking to remove barriers to AI innovation. In service of that goal, the government will, in the next month or so, release a regulatory guidance memo instructing government agencies about “how they should think about AI technologies,” said Kratsios. U.S. vs China in AI A few of the exchanges between Kratsios and Donahoe hit on current hot topics, starting with the tension between the U.S. and China. Donahoe:
Kratsios:
Donahoe:
Kratsios:
Donahoe turned the conversation to a different tension—that between innovation and values. Donahoe:
Kratsios:
A member of the audience pushed further:
Kratsios:
Facial recognition And then the conversation turned to the use of AI for facial recognition, an application which (at least for police and other government agencies) was recently banned in San Francisco. Donahoe:
Kratsios:
A member of the audience followed up on that topic, referring to some data presented earlier at the HAI conference on bias in AI:
Kratsios:
Immigration and innovation A member of the audience brought up the issue of immigration:
The government’s tech infrastructure Donahoe brought the conversation around to the tech infrastructure of the government itself:
Kratsios:
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