Computing Power and the Governance of Artificial Intelligence
Girish Sastry, Lennart Heim, Haydn Belfield, Markus Anderljung, Miles, Brundage, Julian Hazell, Cullen O'Keefe, Gillian K. Hadfield, Richard Ngo,, Konstantin Pilz, George Gor, Emma Bluemke, Sarah Shoker, Janet Egan, Robert, F. Trager, Shahar Avin, Adrian Weller, Yoshua Bengio

TL;DR
This paper explores how computing power can be used as a strategic tool for governing AI development, highlighting its advantages, potential policies, and associated risks.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of using compute as a governance lever for AI, emphasizing its detectability, quantifiability, and centrality in AI development.
Findings
Compute governance can enhance policy visibility and enforcement.
Current policies vary in readiness and effectiveness.
Naive approaches pose significant privacy and centralization risks.
Abstract
Computing power, or "compute," is crucial for the development and deployment of artificial intelligence (AI) capabilities. As a result, governments and companies have started to leverage compute as a means to govern AI. For example, governments are investing in domestic compute capacity, controlling the flow of compute to competing countries, and subsidizing compute access to certain sectors. However, these efforts only scratch the surface of how compute can be used to govern AI development and deployment. Relative to other key inputs to AI (data and algorithms), AI-relevant compute is a particularly effective point of intervention: it is detectable, excludable, and quantifiable, and is produced via an extremely concentrated supply chain. These characteristics, alongside the singular importance of compute for cutting-edge AI models, suggest that governing compute can contribute to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEthics and Social Impacts of AI
