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The Guardian - US
The Guardian - US
World
Uwa Ede-Osifo

Bernie Sanders urges international cooperation to halt AI’s ‘runaway train’

Man at Capitol Hill hearing
Bernie Sanders on Capitol Hill last week. At the Wednesday panel, Sanders raised concerns about widespread AI use. Photograph: Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images

The US senator Bernie Sanders espoused the importance of international cooperation in regulating AI at a Wednesday panel on Capitol Hill alongside two leading Chinese scientists.

As startups and tech giants, most prominently in Silicon Valley and Beijing, race to advance and scale their artificial intelligence, Sanders has been among the AI skeptics advocating for safeguards.

During the discussion, Sanders raised concerns about potential implications stemming from widespread AI use including misinformation, loss of data privacy, and social isolation among adolescents who are dependent on chatbots.

The Vermont senator also voiced alarm about the existential risks automation may pose to American society, raising a possible surge in unemployment if companies favor automated labor over human workers. The researchers on the panel also presented the prospect of super-intelligent systems operating outside the bounds of its designers’ instructions.

“The richest, most powerful people in the world are now building a runaway train with no brakes. They acknowledge that they don’t understand how it works, and they don’t know where it’s headed,” Sanders said, who suggested a doomsday future if safety measures are not implemented.

Sanders, an independent who caucuses with Democrats, called for an international treaty similar to the cold-war era nuclear pact.

“We need to cooperate. We need dialogue,” he said.

The optics of an event with Chinese academics – Xue Lan of Tsinghua University and Zeng Yi of the Beijing Institute of AI Safety and Governance – drew backlash from some conservatives, who did not appear to dispute the need for regulation, but who questioned the trustworthiness of the Chinese government.

“Senator Sanders’ concerns about AI are overstated, but I respect them. We should be asking questions about child safety, community impact, and economic displacement,” wrote Michael Sobolik, a senior fellow at the conservative thinktank the Hudson Institute, in a Monday X post. “What we shouldn’t do is partner with foreign adversaries like the Chinese Communist Party in those discussions.”

In another X post on Monday, US treasury secretary Scott Bessent touted an America-first agenda.

“The United States is home to the most talented AI researchers in the world,” he wrote. “The real threat to AI safety is letting any nation other than the United States set the global standard.”

Addressing the geopolitical situation, Lan said on Wednesday: “It is unimaginable to think of a world that only few countries and few companies have the most powerful tool but the rest of the world is impoverished with nothing.”

He said: “The US and China would have common interest to work together to bridge the AI divide.

Sanders has previously raised alarm about the proliferation of AI.

In March, Sanders and New York congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez announced a bill that, if passed, would halt new construction of AI datacenters.

“AI and robotics are creating the most sweeping technological revolution in the history of humanity. The scale, scope and speed of that change is unprecedented. Congress is way behind where it should be in understanding the nature of this revolution and its impacts,” Sanders said then in a statement.

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