Facebook Pixel AMAZON, GOOGLE, META, MICROSOFT AND OTHER TECH FIRMS AGREE TO AI SAFEGUARDS SET BY THE WHITE HOUSE | AppleMagazine - technology - Read this story on Magzter.com
Go Unlimited with Magzter GOLD

Go Unlimited with Magzter GOLD

Get unlimited access to 10,000+ magazines, newspapers and Premium stories for just

$149.99
 
$74.99/Year

Try GOLD - Free

AMAZON, GOOGLE, META, MICROSOFT AND OTHER TECH FIRMS AGREE TO AI SAFEGUARDS SET BY THE WHITE HOUSE

AppleMagazine

|

July 28, 2023

President Joe Biden said that new commitments by Amazon, Google, Meta, Microsoft and other companies that are leading the development of artificial intelligence technology to meet a set of AI safeguards brokered by his White House are an important step toward managing the “enormous” promise and risks posed by the technology

AMAZON, GOOGLE, META, MICROSOFT AND OTHER TECH FIRMS AGREE TO AI SAFEGUARDS SET BY THE WHITE HOUSE

Biden announced that his administration has secured voluntary commitments from seven U.S. companies meant to ensure that their AI products are safe before they release them. Some of the commitments call for third-party oversight of the workings of the next generation of AI systems, though they don’t detail who will audit the technology or hold the companies accountable.

“We must be clear-eyed and vigilant about the threats emerging technologies can pose,” Biden said, adding that the companies have a “fundamental obligation” to ensure their products are safe.

“Social media has shown us the harm that powerful technology can do without the right safeguards in place,” Biden added. “These commitments are a promising step, but we have a lot more work to do together.”

A surge of commercial investment in generative AI tools that can write convincingly humanlike text and churn out new images and other media has brought public fascination as well as concern about their ability to trick people and spread disinformation, among other dangers.

The four tech giants, along with ChatGPTmaker OpenAI and startups Anthropic and Inflection, have committed to security testing “carried out in part by independent experts” to guard against major risks, such as to biosecurity and cybersecurity, the White House said in a statement.

That testing will also examine the potential for societal harms, such as bias and discrimination, and more theoretical dangers about advanced AI systems that could gain control of physical systems or “self-replicate” by making copies of themselves.

MORE STORIES FROM AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

GOOGLE DEEP RESEARCH GETS ENTERPRISE DATA ACCESS

Google is expanding its autonomous research agent strategy with two new Gemini-powered tools, Deep Research and Deep Research Max, designed to search the open web, connect with private enterprise data, and generate more complete research reports through a single API workflow.

time to read

8 mins

April 24, 2026

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

META TURNS EMPLOYEE WORK INTO AI TRAINING DATA

Meta is beginning to collect mouse movements, clicks, keystrokes, and occasional screen snapshots from U.S.-based employees’ work computers as part of a new internal effort to train AI agents on real workplace behavior.

time to read

7 mins

April 24, 2026

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

FAA GROUNDS BLUE ORIGIN AFTER NEW GLENN MISHAP

The Federal Aviation Administration has ordered Blue Origin to investigate a New Glenn launch mishap after the rocket failed to place an AST SpaceMobile satellite into its planned orbit, temporarily grounding the vehicle until the company completes a formal review and corrective actions are accepted.

time to read

6 mins

April 24, 2026

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

AI USE RAISES COGNITIVE CONCERNS

A growing body of research is beginning to examine whether heavy reliance on generative AI can weaken the mental processes people are supposed to practice when they write, study, and solve problems.

time to read

7 mins

April 24, 2026

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

MAC STUDIO DELAY SHOWS APPLE'S MEMORY STRAIN

Apple's next Mac Studio may not arrive until October, as the global memory shortage begins to disrupt the company’s professional desktop roadmap.

time to read

9 mins

April 24, 2026

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

MUSK KEEPS CONTROL IN SPACEX IPO PLAN

SpaceX’s public IPO filing gives Wall Street a clear message before one of the largest stock offerings ever attempted: the company may be going public, but control is not being sold.

time to read

7 mins

April 24, 2026

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

MERCEDES C-CLASS EV GOES BIG ON SCREENS

Mercedes-Benz has revealed the new electric C-Class sedan, bringing one of its most familiar nameplates into the battery-powered era with a high-output dual-motor system, an 800-volt electrical architecture, and one of the most screen-heavy cabins in the compact luxury segment.

time to read

7 mins

April 24, 2026

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

EU BATTERY RULES MAY RESHAPE SMARTPHONES

The European Union is preparing to force another major hardware change across the smartphone industry, this time targeting one of the most difficult and expensive parts of modern phone ownership: the battery.

time to read

7 mins

April 24, 2026

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

ADOBE LAUNCHES AI SUITE FOR ENTERPRISE MARKETING

Adobe has introduced a new artificial intelligence platform for corporate clients, moving deeper into agentic AI as competition intensifies across creative software, marketing technology, and enterprise automation.

time to read

8 mins

April 24, 2026

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

TESLA ROBOTAXI EXPANDS ACROSS TEXAS

Tesla has expanded its Robotaxi service to Dallas and Houston, marking the company's first Texas growth beyond Austin and giving Elon Musk a broader stage for one of Tesla's most important long-term bets.

time to read

8 mins

April 24, 2026

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size