[Congressional Record Volume 169, Number 147 (Tuesday, September 12, 2023)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4359-S4360]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]



                 Artificial Intelligence Insight Forum

  Mr. SCHUMER. Mr. President, for Congress to legislate on artificial 
intelligence is for to us engage in one of the most complex and 
important subjects Congress has ever faced. In just a few years, 
artificial intelligence has grown in complexity, speed, and power, 
doing things even experts didn't think possible so soon.
  In past situations, when subjects like this that are so complex and 
difficult have come forward, too many Congresses have tended to behave 
reactively or have favored delaying action until it is too late. But on 
AI, we can't behave like ostriches and stick our heads in the sand. It 
will affect just about every aspect of society in major ways, both 
positive and negative, and on an issue this wide-ranging and important, 
we must make every good-faith effort to act.
  Congress must recognize two things; that this effort must be 
bipartisan and that we need outside help if we want to write effective 
AI policies. We need help, of course, from developers and experts who 
build AI systems, but we also need help from critics who can make sure 
the liabilities of AI are minimized by guardrails. Those critics will 
come from two places, like from outside the industry, such as labor and 
civil rights and the creative community, but we also need critics from 
inside the industry as well who may know, in a very technical sense, 
how to minimize the dangers.
  That is why tomorrow will be so important. Tomorrow morning, I will 
convene, with Senators Rounds and Heinrich and Young, the first of a 
series of AI Insight Forums to bring leaders from inside and outside 
the industry to debate Congress's role in regulating AI.
  We will have a balanced and diverse group at the table, not just 
those from tech but AI experts and ethicists who have spent years 
researching and advancing the technology. We will also have 
organizations outside the industry representing labor and civil rights, 
the world of academia and defense, and so much more--all of these 
groups together in one room, talking about how and why Congress must 
act, what questions to ask, and how to build a consensus for SAFE 
innovation. That is, of course, what we have called our suggestion 
because AI innovation must be our North Star in all we do.

[[Page S4360]]

  And I am talking about innovation in both a transformational sense--
the kind of innovation that unlocks new cures, improves education, 
protects our national security, protects our food supply--and 
sustainable innovation so that we may find new and creative ways to 
protect against AI's risks and minimize the chances of this technology 
going off the rails, which would undermine innovation altogether.
  The only way we will achieve this goal is by bringing a diverse group 
of perspectives together, from those who work every day on these 
systems to those openly critical of many parts of AI and who worry 
about its effects on workers, on racial and gender bias, and more. So I 
look forward to tomorrow's conversation, the first of many we will have 
this fall. I expect we will hear a wide range of views and opinions and 
lots of dissenting views. That is how it should be.
  I want to thank every participant attending tomorrow's forum. Thank 
you also to Senators Rounds and Heinrich and Young, who helped to 
organize tomorrow's meeting. And, of course, I want to thank all of my 
colleagues from both sides of the aisle who recognize the urgency of 
AI.
  The Senate is fully engaged on this issue and is ready to do more. 
Our committees and subcommittees have already held no fewer than nine 
hearings on AI, with more happening this week, all on issues ranging 
from national security to human rights, to IP, and more. We need all 
hands on deck if we want to maximize AI's societal benefits while 
minimizing its many risks. Tomorrow, we will take the next step in this 
great undertaking, and I urge all of my colleagues from both sides to 
attend.