I think these are very good questions, and I thank you for making this list.
I also think this is a pretty bad title, and promotes an unfortunately adversarial approach on this question.
Considering China is a necessary part of AI regulation deliberation, and if it only comes up as an adversarial objection to proposed regulation, as in “but China,” then earlier deliberation is not taking place as it should. If you’re considering like, US industrial policy, you should consider how it is influenced by and influences China before some third party is like “Yo, what about China and your industrial party?”; a fortiori for AI.
Condensing another set of concerns into “but FOOM” or “but stagnation” or “but tyranny” would also be unfruitful. “Cruxes on China for Domestic AI regulation” or something seems a better title.
Sounds right, I’ll remove “but China” and reframe away from responding to an adversarial objection. (For posterity: the title was “But China”: Some cruxes for some domestic AI regulation.) Thanks.
(I do think “but China” is better than e.g. “but FOOM” because it carves reality close to the joints to divide some US AI policy questions into effect if US keeps its lead and effect on US lead, and “but China” is the latter set of considerations. But that doesn’t make the title good.)
I think these are very good questions, and I thank you for making this list.
I also think this is a pretty bad title, and promotes an unfortunately adversarial approach on this question.
Considering China is a necessary part of AI regulation deliberation, and if it only comes up as an adversarial objection to proposed regulation, as in “but China,” then earlier deliberation is not taking place as it should. If you’re considering like, US industrial policy, you should consider how it is influenced by and influences China before some third party is like “Yo, what about China and your industrial party?”; a fortiori for AI.
Condensing another set of concerns into “but FOOM” or “but stagnation” or “but tyranny” would also be unfruitful. “Cruxes on China for Domestic AI regulation” or something seems a better title.
Sounds right, I’ll remove “but China” and reframe away from responding to an adversarial objection. (For posterity: the title was “But China”: Some cruxes for some domestic AI regulation.) Thanks.
(I do think “but China” is better than e.g. “but FOOM” because it carves reality close to the joints to divide some US AI policy questions into effect if US keeps its lead and effect on US lead, and “but China” is the latter set of considerations. But that doesn’t make the title good.)