AI leaders call for tougher protections against AI-aided bioweapons
The Verge ·

Some of the AI industry’s biggest rivals have put their many , many grievances aside for a common cause: making it harder for people to use their technology to develop biological weapons. …
Some of the AI industry’s biggest rivals have put their many , many grievances aside for a common cause: making it harder for people to use their technology to develop biological weapons. In an open letter to US lawmakers, tech leaders are pressing Congress to enact rules closing what they say is an alarming biosecurity gap that could help trigger a global pandemic. Anthropic’s Dario Amodei, OpenAI’s Sam Altman, and Microsoft’s Mustafa Suleyman are among the signatories urging US lawmakers to require companies selling synthetic DNA and RNA — genetic material that can ordered online and assembled in a lab — to screen purchases for sequences that could be used to make dangerous pathogens. The fear is that AI tools could make it easier to design potentially dangerous sequences, order them from manufacturers, and use them in ways that would previously have required more specialized expertise. Other signers include Meta’s AI chief Alexandr Wang and Google DeepMind’s Demis Hassabis, who won the 2024 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his work on AI-based protein prediction. The letter was also signed by prominent scientists, national security and policy experts, and executives from biotech companies including Twist Bioscience and Ansa Biotechnologies, both major sellers of synthetic genetic material. The letter was reportedly organized by two think tanks: the Foundation for American Innovation and the Institute for Progress. …
Original source: The Verge
Mentioned
Meta · OpenAI · Congress · Microsoft · Sam Altman · Google DeepMind