Earlier this week, the White House’s Office of Science and Technology Policy released what it calls a “Blueprint for an AI Bill of Rights.” Not only does the name mix policy- cliche metaphors (are we building something or amending the U.S. Constitution?) but it also embeds the obfuscating hype term “AI” rather than pointing at the automated systems and their human designers behind them. The White House describes the document as a “framework” that offers “five principles that should guide the design, use, and deployment of automated systems,” and also as a “handbook for anyone seeking to incorporate these protections into policy and practice.” So ultimately it is a handbook for a blueprint for a framework.
Automatic outs
Automatic outs
Automatic outs
Earlier this week, the White House’s Office of Science and Technology Policy released what it calls a “Blueprint for an AI Bill of Rights.” Not only does the name mix policy- cliche metaphors (are we building something or amending the U.S. Constitution?) but it also embeds the obfuscating hype term “AI” rather than pointing at the automated systems and their human designers behind them. The White House describes the document as a “framework” that offers “five principles that should guide the design, use, and deployment of automated systems,” and also as a “handbook for anyone seeking to incorporate these protections into policy and practice.” So ultimately it is a handbook for a blueprint for a framework.