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Wikimedia Commons/Madhav-Malhotra-003/2022

About the Authors

Tam Hunt

Tam Hunt is a lawyer and activist based on the Big Island. He is co-founder of Think B.I.G. and a board member for the Hawaii Electric Vehicle association.

Noel Morin

Noel Morin is a climate, sustainability, and resilience advocate based in Hawaii.


We are heading soon to the point where artificial intelligence can do anything that humans can do, but faster.

Argentina just had the world鈥檚 first 鈥淎I election.鈥 No, AI was not running for office, but politicians used artificial intelligence very aggressively to create deepfake videos and images that seemed to have an impact on the presidential election.

The New York Times AI has made candidates say things they did not, and put them in famous movies and memes. It has created campaign posters and triggered debates over whether real videos .

A lot is happening as the world reels from the dramatic improvements in AI in the last year. AI 鈥渃hatbots,鈥 image and video generators, recommendation engines, and many other forms of AI are getting scary good, and improving scarily fast. Human-level jobs are starting to be done by AI and this trend will accelerate in the next few years.

We are heading rather soon for the point where AI can do anything that humans can do 鈥 but far, far faster. This level of AI is known as 鈥淎rtificial General Intelligence鈥 or AGI.

Industry predictions for when AGI will arrive have advanced from 鈥渕aybe never鈥 to 鈥渟ometime this century鈥 to now as early as 2028, just five years away. 

Artificial intelligence is scarily real and so must be regulated by government. (Wikimedia Commons/Alenoach/2023)

An from earlier this year concluded after extensive testing of OpenAI鈥檚 GPT4.0 chatbot that it showed 鈥渟parks of AGI鈥 already. Their study made big news after they found that this AI could on the Uniform Bar Exam (the standardized portion of the bar exam to become a certified lawyer) than 90% of human test takers 鈥 up from just 10% in the previous version.

World leaders met in November in England to discuss how to keep AI safe. They produced a document, the , that was signed by all nations present, including China. This is a good start, but we will, of course, need far more to ensure that AI remains safe and to avoid an out-of-control AI arms race between nations.

At the national level, President Joe Biden also issued a (very long) this month that provides a framework to keep AI safe in the U.S. It requires changes to several federal agencies and puts in place various safeguards.

This is also a good start, and we applaud Biden for acting quickly. It is, however, only an executive order, and the next president could erase it in a moment. We need legislation and a new federal agency to robustly regulate AI.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer is working on a , but it is not at all clear whether such a bill will make it through Congress during this very strange election cycle. It is also unlikely that Congress will pass anything that is aggressive enough or timely enough, given the very rapid pace of AI development.

States can act more quickly and more aggressively to meet this urgent need for regulating AI. Hawaii is leading the way with a new draft bill co-sponsored by Sens. Mike Gabbard and Chris Lee.

This bill is groundbreaking in that it places the 鈥減recautionary principle鈥 front and center in allowing AI products to be used here in Hawaii. The bill would, under this principle, require proactively that AI companies demonstrate the safety of their products before they鈥檙e allowed to be used in Hawaii.

The bill also adopts the European Union’s approach of 鈥渞isk-based regulation鈥 in that the height of the bar to be cleared by each company will be based on the potential dangers of each technology. The greater the risk, the higher the bar that must be cleared.

States can act more quickly and more aggressively to meet this urgent need.

For AGI products 鈥 let鈥檚 say OpenAI GPT-5 or 6, for example, when they become available 鈥 the bar will be very high indeed for demonstrating safety. But for less risky products such as product recommendation algorithms (like Netflix or YouTube uses), the bar will be lower.

There is a good precedent for what this bill is trying to do. Hawaii has strict cryptocurrency regulations already in place. While Hawaii can鈥檛 outlaw the use of cryptocurrency entirely, it can regulate which crypto exchanges are allowed to operate here and which exchanges Hawaii residents can access.

Hawaii in 2016 to protect consumers from unscrupulous crypto exchanges 鈥 risks that have been highlighted by the recent conviction of Sam Bankman-Fried for numerous financial crimes based on his time running FTX, once a major crypto exchange before it collapsed.

Under Hawaii鈥檚 current rules, s are allowed to operate in Hawaii.

Hawaii should take a similar approach to AI websites like OpenAI鈥檚 ChatGPT, Bing (which uses a version of ChatGPT), Anthropic, Google鈥檚 Bard, etc. The Gabbard and Lee draft bill would achieve this.

Agents Of AI

We are already trending as the next generation of AI tools. While today鈥檚 AI tools like ChatGPT can do many impressive things in terms of mastering human language, producing realistic images, and even coding complex software, they are still not autonomous agents. They require human input. The next generation of AI tools, however, will be autonomous and capable of executing complex and lengthy tasks without human input.

Since computing power is cheap and easily accessible, these AI agents will soon flood the Internet in the billions and trillions, wreaking havoc as they go 鈥 unless they are very tightly regulated. The from 2016, which used early AI tools to individually target social media users with election misinformation, will look quaint in comparison to what is coming soon in terms of AI agents.

Argentina鈥檚 example, as the first 鈥淎I election,鈥 is just the very beginning of what we can expect to see.

Hawaii can and should take the lead on this highly important issue by ensuring that new AI tools demonstrate their safety before they鈥檙e released in Hawaii.

Please contact your legislators to share your thoughts on AI and AI regulation.

Community Voices aims to encourage broad discussion on many topics of community interest. It鈥檚 kind of a cross between Letters to the Editor and op-eds. This is your space to talk about important issues or interesting people who are making a difference in our world. Column lengths should be no more than 800 words and we need a photo of the author and a bio. We welcome video commentary and other multimedia formats. Send to news@civilbeat.org. The opinions and information expressed in Community Voices are solely those of the authors and not Civil Beat.


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About the Authors

Tam Hunt

Tam Hunt is a lawyer and activist based on the Big Island. He is co-founder of Think B.I.G. and a board member for the Hawaii Electric Vehicle association.

Noel Morin

Noel Morin is a climate, sustainability, and resilience advocate based in Hawaii.


Latest Comments (0)

We accept salmonella in our chicken and are told to just cook it or you'll get sick. Using this mantra we have defunded the FDA and the USDA over the last 40 years. In fact there is only 6 inspectors thruout the Midwest that inspects poultry farms. In Europe they don't accept salmonella in their foods to begin with, and there is a much converted effort to keep it out. We can save billions of dollars a year by getting rid of pilots and air traffic controllers and having AI plot routes take off and land the planes. But would that be wise? Millions of people with good paying jobs that add considerably to the GDP would be thrown out of work. Causing economic devastation. AI programming in no way could provide the jobs that were lost. Just because technology says this is the best course for making money for a handful of people doesn't mean it's best for society. Progress for whom must be weighed in the balance. Society or one company? We can regulate AI, how about just saying no to it's recommendations? Having a set of laws that put society and people first is the very definition of regulation. Having a set of guidelines to what AI can be used for is regulation.

TheMotherShip · 1 year ago

AI is nothing but the application of statistics to large models of data. Given a large enough dataset, patterns of statistical significance can be detected and embedded into computational output. ChatGPT is just a one-dimensional statistical algorithm: "Given a subset of word, what word is most statistically likely to follow?"DALL-E is just a two-dimensional statistical algorithm: "Given a set of x/y coordinates, what color should not the next pixel in the array be?"Is the intent of this proposed legislation to outlaw statistics? Because that's all this is in the end. You can't regulate this. The transformer architecture has been discovered and the genie is out of the bottle. The only limits are (1) getting the data and (2) getting the computational power to train models from said data. Right now, only big companies can afford to do these things, but we all know compute power goes up and prices go down in time. Eventually, every nerd will be training their own LLMs in their bedrooms, and it will be done at 100x the speed and 1/100 of the cost of what it is today.Instead of trying to fight this technology, you should be learning to use it to fight fire with fire.

fotahor223 · 1 year ago

We also need to regulate RI (Real Intelligence) in Hawaii. We need more of it in positions of power and decision making. Leadership roles need to be filled with qualified, intelligent, and ethical leaders.

Greg · 1 year ago

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