©Larry Catá Backer; Pieter Bruegel, The Tower of Babel 1563 (Vienna Arthistorical Museum) |
The issue of the social relations between humans and the virtual spaces they inhabit--which are populated by both human dependent and, increasingly by self-learning programs that have acquired a certain amount of autonomy from their coders--have begun to capture the imagination of social collectives. Having spent a tremendous amount of time and effort to detach humanity from exogenous supra-human forces that appeared to have dominion over the human, one now encounters a situation where it may be possible to argue that humanity has (re)created God in their own image.
The response has sought to deploy many of the categorical mechanics of human agency on the virtual processes thy have created, or at least on the willingness of humans to accept the overlordship of the program, the simulation, and the like thrugh acceptance of the judgments they produce. These deployments include constitutional principles, moral. and ethical frameworks that are meant somehow to assert a (collective) human engagement or control of the systems, processes, and judgments that humans themselves have coded into machines that now might think for themselves (at least within the parameters of their programming, and subject to the logic of the human condition that is represented by the instructions for data identification, generation, analysis, and principles embedded in coding. These self-referencing systems are, in a sense both all too human and at the same time collectively supra-human in their good, bad, or indifferent habits of engaging with the stimuli that animate their programming.
The problem, then, can be understood in semiotic terms. Where the language of social relations shifts from text to code, a transposition of the mechanics of orthodoxy is required. That mechanics requires both translation and quality control measures. That is it requires a re-invention of the signification of the signs and objects through which meaning is described and applied in social relations. It also requires a new supervisory structures--from the discretionary decision making of human collectives (public and private operating as an exogenous force against heresy), to the automated self learning machines that serve that purpose in the ecologies of enormous data flows (public and private analytics ted to judgments of aggregated data representing a quantified vision of social relations in macro and micro relations and endogenous (within) them). Chat-GPT like efforts represents the quality control element of this transposition; the self-learning machine coding and algorithms (judgment structures) represent spaces where once text based ordering principles are realized.
These discussions have, of course, spilled over onto regulatory spaces--for where better to cement collective meaning making and a unified orthodoxy respecting humanity's creatures than the human spaces created for the incarnation of an aggregated human (virtual) person expressed within the apparatus of politics in its administrative organs (I dare not suggest a correspondence with the organs of the individual). Much good work has resulted--in the sense of achieving their intended effect; it is for history to judge both its value and its success even in line with its own ambitions.
One of the more interesting efforts was recent announced by the CAIDP (Center for AI and Digital Policy). which, in its own words, "aims to promote a better society, more fair, more just — a world where technology promotes broad social inclusion based on fundamental rights, democratic institutions, and the rule of law." To those ends,
joined by others, will file a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission, calling for an investigation of Open AI and the product chatGPT. We believe the FTC has the authority to act in this matter and is uniquely positioned as the lead consumer protection agency in the United States to address this emerging challenge. We will ask the FTC to establish a moratorium on the release of further commercial versions of GPT until appropriate safeguards are established. We will simultaneously petition the FTC to undertake a rulemaking for the regulation of the generative AI industry.
The announcement and justification follow. It may be accessed here in the original.
POSTSCRIPT: The Press Release announcing the filing of the FTC Complaint may be accessed HERE (30 March 2023)
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