Regulators are scrambling to adapt existing rules and create new guidelines to govern the use of generative AI.

The CEO of ChatGPT maker OpenAI said on Monday that his visit to the capital had made him “pretty optimistic” about the prospects for global cooperation on artificial intelligence (AI).
Backed by Microsoft, the face of the startup is on a dizzying iteration to use its interest in generative AI to influence regulation of the burgeoning technology.
“I came on this trip…I was skeptical that it would be possible in the short term to get global cooperation to alleviate the existential crisis, but now I feel very optimistic that it can be achieved. We are finishing our trip in ,” Sam Altman told the students. Tokyo.
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Regulators are scrambling to adapt existing rules and create new guidelines to govern the use of generative AI. Generative AI can create text and images, causing excitement and fear about its potential to reshape a wide range of industries.
While the European Union is drafting AI legislation due to pass this year, the United States is leaning toward adapting existing legislation to AI rather than enacting new legislation.
Altman said he visited Japan in April to meet with Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and was considering opening an office in the country.
“All the conversations are going very smoothly,” Altman said on Monday, without elaborating.
Japan is seen as lagging behind in the kinds of AI services that are currently fueling consumer craze, even as manufacturing powerhouses invest in automation technology.
“We have a long history of humans and machines working together here,” says Altman.
Altman plans to visit Singapore, Indonesia and Australia before returning to the US
Date first published: Jun 12, 2023, 13:47 IST
