China Says Chatbots Must Be Strictly Censored by Communist Guidelines

Impossible Bar With or without guardrails in place, AI-powered chatbots — like OpenAI’s ChatGPT or Google’s Bard — are notoriously unpredictable. Even so, the New York Times is reporting that any chatbots operating within China’s digital borders must comply with the ruling Communist Party’s censorship laws. Of course, with that unpredictability in mind, the jury’s still out on whether or not the makers of chatbots will be able to comply with that mandate. But as Kendra Schaefer, head of tech policy at the Beijing-based consulting firm Trivium China, explained to the NYT, the notably censorship-happy Chinese government tends to take a “move fast and break things” approach to tech regulation. “Because you don’t have a two-party system where both sides argue,” China’s leadership “can just say, ‘OK, we know we need to do this, and we’ll revise it later,'” Schaefer told the newspaper. ChatYuan Importantly, neither ChatGPT nor Bard are actually available in China. But innovators in China are already experimenting with their own versions of the viral tech — one of which, dubbed ChatYuan, was already removed from China’s version of the app store for its failure to comply with censorship law. After being released back in February, ChatYuan, per the NYT, quickly started churning out a “bleak diagnosis of the Chinese economy” and referred to the Russian invasion of Ukraine as a “war of aggression.” The Chinese government — which recently saw widespread citizen protests widely credited as a response to COVID restriction-amplified economic woes and counts itself…China Says Chatbots Must Be Strictly Censored by Communist Guidelines

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