The mixed public and private consortium will focus on safety, standards and skills-building for AI generally and generative AI in particular.
The National Institute of Standards and Technology established the AI Safety Institute on Feb. 7 to determine guidelines and standards for AI measurement and policy. U.S. AI companies and companies that do business in the U.S. will be affected by those guidelines and standards and may have the opportunity to have input about them.
The U.S. AI Safety Institute is a joint public and private sector research group and data-sharing space for “AI creators and users, academics, government and industry researchers, and civil society organizations,” according to NIST.
Organizations could apply to become members between Nov. 2, 2023 and Jan. 15, 2024. Out of more than 600 interested organizations, NIST chose 200 companies and organizations to become members. Participating organizations include Apple, Anthropic, Cisco, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Hugging Face, Microsoft, Meta, NVIDIA, OpenAI, Salesforce and other companies, academic institutions and research organizations.
Those members will work on projects including:
“Responsible AI offers enormous potential for humanity, businesses and public services, and Cisco firmly believes that a holistic, simplified approach will help the U.S. safely realize the full benefits of AI,” said Nicole Isaac, vice president, global public policy at Cisco, in a statement to NIST.
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“Working together across industry, government and civil society is essential if we are to develop common standards around safe and trustworthy AI,” said Nick Clegg, president of global affairs at Meta, in a statement to NIST. “We’re enthusiastic about being part of this consortium and working closely with the AI Safety Institute.”
An interesting omission on the list of U.S. AI Safety Institute members is the Future of Life Institute, a global nonprofit with investors including Elon Musk, established to prevent AI from contributing to “extreme large-scale risks” such as global war.
The U.S. AI Safety Institute was created as part of the efforts set in place by President Joe Biden’s Executive Order on AI proliferation and safety in October 2023.
The U.S. AI Safety Institute falls under the jurisdiction of the Department of Commerce. Elizabeth Kelly is the institute’s inaugural director, and Elham Tabassi is its chief technology officer.
In the U.S., AI safety and regulation at the government level is handled by NIST, and, now, the U.S. AI Safety Institute under NIST. The major AI companies in the U.S. have worked with the government on encouraging AI safety and skills to help the AI industry build the economy.
Academic institutions working on AI safety include Stanford University and University of Maryland and others.
A group of international cybersecurity organizations established the Guidelines for Secure AI System Development in November 2023 to address AI safety early in the development cycle.
Megan Crouse has a decade of experience in business-to-business news and feature writing, including as first a writer and then the editor of Manufacturing.net. Her news and feature stories have appeared in Military & Aerospace Electronics, Fierce Wireless, TechRepublic, and eWeek. She copyedited cybersecurity news and features at Security Intelligence. She holds a degree in English Literature and minored in Creative Writing at Fairleigh Dickinson University.