Tom Wheeler
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Here's how we're going to, and have behavioral effects that are governed by a code that
that is established by a multi-stakeholder process that includes the industry and the government and is enforceable.
I mean, I think these are amazing.
I know the people who run them, and these are not evil people.
And I think that a very wise strategy would be for them to do just that, to say, hey, let's step up.
and come forth with our rules, our own standards.
It's very interesting to me that that's what we're beginning to see happening in the world of artificial intelligence.
You know, you've got Microsoft, Google, OpenAI and others saying, hey, we need some kind of a regulatory program to establish what the rules are.
I think that makes a lot of sense.
And I think that it is even more interesting
that the companies that have been historically opposed to any kind of government oversight now with AI are saying, oh, we need to have oversight.
Sudhar Pichai, the CEO of Google, said that AI is too important not to regulate and too important not to regulate well.
I couldn't have said it better myself.
And so they're saying, how do we have that?
Let's have that debate.
So hopefully, maybe IAI is part of the breakthrough that will change things.
And the frightening thing to me, and I, and I use the word frightening, not casually.
If I were an American company, I would be truly frightened by the fact that the rules are being made in the rest of the world right now, that the European union, the UK, China are all making the rules, all the kinds of things that you and I have discussed thus far.
While the United States government has been taking a hands-off approach,
The European Union and the UK have been stepping in and saying, we're going to do something about it.