Japan federal government weighs AI adoption as Sam Altman gos to PM Kishida

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OpenAI logo design showed on a phone screen and ChatGPT site showed on a laptop computer screen are seen in this illustration picture taken in Krakow, Poland on December 5, 2022.

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Japan will think about federal government adoption of expert system innovation such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT chatbot if personal privacy and cybersecurity issues are fixed, Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirokazu Matsuno stated on Monday.

The remarks from Matsuno, the leading federal government representative, came soon prior to Sam Altman, president of OpenAI, fulfilled Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida throughout a check out to Japan, where Altman stated his business is “looking at opening an office.”

“We hope to … build something great for Japanese people, make the models better for Japanese language and Japanese culture,” Altman informed press reporters following his conference with Kishida.

Asked about Italy’s momentary restriction on ChatGPT– established by Microsoft backed OpenAI– Matsuno informed a routine press conference that Japan understands other nations’ actions.

Japan will continue assessing possibilities of presenting AI to minimize federal government employees’ work after examining how to react to issues such as information breaches, Matsuno stated.

Following Italy’s constraint of ChatGPT, which motivated other European nations to study such procedures, OpenAI recently provided procedures to correct personal privacy breach issues to the Italian regulator.

In an article recently entitled “Our approach to AI safety,” the San Francisco- based business stated it was working to establish “nuanced policies against behavior that represents a genuine risk to people.”

OpenAI CEO Altman stated he informed Japan’s Kishida about “the upsides of this technology and how to mitigate the downsides” at the Monday conference in Tokyo.