Most AI policy conversations start from the assumption that we're in unprecedented territory. But are we? This conversation ...
AI is moving from autocomplete to autopilot. These systems are no longer just suggesting courses of action; they're acting on our behalf, trading in markets, making decisions, and pursuing goals. Soon ...
Following the Trump Administration's order limiting states' ability to regulate AI, Sanders and Schneier argue that it's time for leaders to take firmer stances on the technology. In a piece for The ...
The same capabilities that make AI valuable for cybersecurity, including autonomous operation, rapid decision-making at scale ...
BKC Co-Director Rebecca Tushnet weighs in on the Court's decision to throw out a copyright-infringement decision against Cox.
Fellow Jeffrey Snover reflects on the STAMP Safety Design Workshop at MIT in a blog post, arguing that 'AI safety' treats the technology as a system, rather than as a component of a system. "Stop ...
Artificial intelligence has made it possible for governments to aggregate, analyze, and act on data about individuals at a scale and speed that existing legal frameworks were never designed to address ...
Alan Raul remarks that the Trump-Anthropic dispute underscores the need for a national policy to govern transformative AI.
Affiliate and former BKC Fellow Dylan Moses asks how far the "potential" to invoke violence or harm can take us in regulating ...
Faculty Associate Leah Plunkett argues that the spread of "brain rot" - a species of nonsensical, repetitive, and often overstimulating online content geared toward young users - is being accelerated ...
Woodrow Hartzog and Jessica Silbey argue that even intentionally-used AI erodes the foundations of democratic institutions in a conversation with Tech Policy Press's Justin Hendrix.
When you talk with a chatbot, what does it “think” about you? Recent work in AI interpretability, based on high-dimensional geometry, is beginning to provide some intriguing answers. In this talk ...