The Proxy Battle Over A.I. Policy Is Brewing ⇥ wired.com
Lydia Moynihan, New York Post:
“You have this huge ecosystem pushing AI doomerism with zero regard for the consequences — the main one being that America will fall behind in the global AI race,” Nathan Leamer, executive director of Build American AI, told me. “And they genuinely don’t seem bothered by it.”
And according to a report released this week from the Bull Moose Project, doomers have been spending a fortune.
A tight network of donors, with former Facebook executive Dustin Moskovitz’s Coefficient Giving at the center, has already spent $5.9 billion and has $37.8 billion more publicly pledged, according to the report.
They have given out more than $611 million in donations to candidates (99.8% of whom are Democrats), dark money groups and so-called AI safety organizations such as Future of Life Institute, the report adds.
It is the Post, so you expect a degree of bad faith, but this is deceptive even for them.
The Bull Moose Project is one of several organizations sharing an address and financial connections with the Conservative Partnership Institute, which is overseen by the president’s former chief of staff, and to which the president gave $1 million. The Bull Moose Project’s website promotes a “plan to rejuvenate America” and, in the “American Revitalization” section, illustrates this with a lovely painting of a person launching a canoe beside a float plane. This is maybe only funny to me, but I had to track down that image — hotlinked from Pinterest — and it is a painting by Ross Buckland, who was born in Calgary and now lives in Ontario. I am pretty I recognize the mountain peaks as part of the Canadian Rockies.
Anyhow, its report largely concerns the political spending of Anthropic, CEO Dario Amodei, and various other executives, board members, and associated parties. It is so all-consuming it begins to look like a red string board, and is similarly difficult to follow. But it sounds ominous. There is a page dedicated to “the China connection”, but it is pretty weak.
Also, you will note that, instead of citing academics or subject matter experts, Moynihan favourably quotes the executive director of Build America [sic] AI. But Moynihan does not note the group’s funding sources nor explain anything more about it.
Emily Wilkins, CNBC:
The [Leading the Future] PAC, which has said it would support both Democratic and Republican candidates, is also connected to advocacy group Build American AI, which launched a $10 million campaign to push a uniform national AI policy.
Contributors to Leading the Future include private equity firm Andreessen Horowitz, Open AI co-founder Greg Brockman, Palantir co-founder Joe Lonsdale, SV Angel Founder Ron Conway and AI software company Perplexity.
Laura J. Nelson, Wall Street Journal:
While Congress hasn’t passed a comprehensive law for the fast-growing technology, some states have begun discussing or passing regulations rooted in concern about the need for more AI safeguards.
They include policies championed by nonprofit groups tied to the effective-altruism movement, a broad social and moral philosophy that has become divisive in Silicon Valley owing in part to its focus on potential worst-case scenarios in AI development. Pro-AI forces call them “doomers.”
An effort to punch back against Leading the Future went public Tuesday: an organization called Public First that plans to back candidates from both parties through two super PACs. The group, which is organized under section 501(c)(4) of the tax code and isn’t required to disclose its donors, is aiming to raise at least $50 million.
Anthropic gave $20 million to Public First.
Taylor Lorenz, Wired:
Marketing agencies are pitching influencers deals such as $5,000 per TikTok video to amplify Build American AI’s messaging about how China’s technological rise should be seen as a threat. The goal, according to a staffer from SM4, the influencer marketing agency running the campaign on behalf of Build American AI, is to subtly shift public debate by framing China’s AI advancement as a serious risk to the safety and well-being of Americans.
Lorenz learned about this because, she says, SM4 pitched her on the campaign. Leading the Future, which runs Build American AI, raised $125 million last year and it is spending it on this.
These influencers are being used to help settle an argument, among some of the world’s richest and least-likeable people, over whether OpenAI (its position backed by Build American AI and Bull Moose Project) or Anthropic (through Public First) should get to write A.I. policy and regulations. Apparently, “neither” is not an option. To its credit, that report from the Bull Moose Project correctly notes the ongoing “proxy war over A.I. policy”, though it stops short of admitting the part it plays.
What both sides appear to agree on is that they must treat A.I. from China as a threat. Those of us elsewhere, however, likely find both threatening, albeit for different reasons.