Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong believes the United States should not regulate or restrict the development of artificial intelligence (AI) at all, saying that any attempt to mitigate its negative consequences will only slow its progress.
“We’ve enjoyed a golden age of innovation on software and the internet largely due to it not being regulated,” said Armstrong over Twitter on Friday. “AI should do the same.”
The executive’s comments mirror his prior takes concerning the crypto industry, which he’s warned for years will be pushed overseas if burdened with too many laws. This is particularly true in the realm of decentralized finance (DeFi), which Coinbase argued last year shouldn’t get the same regulatory attention as centralized firms.
As with finance, Armstrong said we should “decentralize” and “open source” the AI industry and “let the cat out of the bag.”
“The track record on regulation is that it has unintended consequences and kills competition[and] innovation, despite best intentions,” he argued.
As the United States scrambles to make its mind up on tech regulation, the European Union is taking another major step towards Big Tech regulation in the world of artificial intelligence (AI).
The European Parliament overwhelmingly voted on Wednesday to pass a new draft law of the Artificial Intelligence Act with 499 votes in favor, 28 against, and 93 abstentions. The final version of the law is expected to be voted on sometime in late 2023.
“The AI Act will set the tone worldwide in the develop...
Since the mass mainstream adoption of OpenAI’s ChatGPT, investors and tech industry giants are racing to exploit every opportunity for innovation presented by the technology. Applications include text/image generation, coding, cancer detection, self-driving cars, and more.
Earlier this week, an anonymous Ethereum developer created a tool that leverages ChatGPT to automatically deploy new crypto tokens to Ethereum using a simple command. Others have leveraged ChatGPT’s technology to create educational tools for crypto, including one that evokes the voice of Bitcoin’s long lost creator, Satoshi Nakamoto.
The technology is also growing popular for more nefarious purposes, however, including the promotion of realistic-sounding crypto scams en masse using social media, or flooding Amazon’s marketplace with low-quality ebooks.
Artificial Intelligence is the shiny new thing venture capitalists are throwing money at—leaving once red-hot crypto projects flailing for funding.
Mysten Labs co-founder and CEO Evan Cheng said this shift is due to the ability of AI products and applications to cater to a broader audience while the crypto industry continues to focuses on itself.
“Multidisciplinary venture capitalists are increasingly turning their attention to artificial intelligence investments, driven by the technology’s prov...
Beyond crypto, Armstrong said fast progress on AI is important for many reasons – national security among them. Indeed, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) noted last year that AI is altering “the very character of war,” from “predicting mechanical failures in weapons platforms to performing complex analysis to support its warfighting mission.”
AI-based innovations were notably absent from Armstrong’s top 10 crypto innovations he highlighted last month. He instead supported efforts like layer-2 privacy, Web3 game economies, and attempts to “tokenizing everything.”
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