JUN 5, 2023 • Article
Are We Automating the Banality and Radicality of Evil?
Current iterations of AI are increasingly able to encourage subservience to a non-human master, telling potentially systematic untruths with emphatic confidence.
MAY 31, 2023 • Article
To Engage or Not Engage: Ethical Challenges and Tradeoffs for U.S. Statecraft in 2023
Approaches for policymakers to consider when grappling with the ethical questions of whether and how to engage with authoritarian or increasingly illiberal states and actors.
MAY 31, 2023 • Podcast
C2GTalk: How can the world put justice at the heart of governing climate-altering technologies? with Kumi Naidoo
Governing climate-altering technologies fairly will be very challenging, says Kumi Naidoo. Nonetheless, it will be crucial to put justice at the heart of these considerations.
MAY 30, 2023 • Podcast
Expectations, with David Robson
In this episode, host Hilary Sutcliffe explores . . . expectation from another angle. Her guest David Robson delves into the science of expectation in his award-winning new ...
MAY 24, 2023 • Article
Silicon Valley is knowingly violating ethical AI principles. Society can’t respond if we let disagreements poison the debate.
With criticism of ChatGPT much in the news, we are also increasingly hearing about disagreements among thinkers who are critical of AI, writes Carnegie-Uehiro Fellow ...
MAY 23, 2023 • News
Fortune: "Silicon Valley is knowingly violating ethical A.I. principles. Society can’t respond if we let disagreements poison the debate."
In this article for "Fortune," Senior Fellow Wendell Wallach writes that debating about issues, such as ChatGPT, is natural and expected, we can't allow differences ...
MAY 23, 2023 • News
Foreign Policy: "Solar Geoengineering Is Coming. It’s Time to Regulate It."
In this article for "Foreign Policy," C2G Executive Director Janos Pasztor writes that it's become clear that there is a need for governance in ...
MAY 22, 2023 • Article
Sitting on the Sidelines: The Global Divide on Ukraine
Carnegie Council President Joel Rosenthal reflects on the global divide in relation to Russia's invasion of Ukraine.