politics
The House Judiciary Committee sent a letter to Google and YouTube’s parent companies insisting that all communications between federal authorities and Alphabet regarding Gemini be turned over to the committee.
Reuters
House Republicans are demanding documents from Google to learn whether the U.S. government influenced the company’s woke artificial intelligence program Gemini.
The House Judiciary Committee sent a letter to Alphabet, the parent company of Google and YouTube, on Saturday urging it to turn over all communications between federal authorities and Alphabet regarding Gemini to the committee by March 17th.
“In light of emerging reporting on how Alphabet intentionally biased its AI model, Gemini, by giving Americans instructions to skew the results shared… We would like to inform you that we consider this to be comprehensive in its content related to this technology,” the letter written by the committee’s chairman, Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio, reads.
Jordan said the Gemini team must ensure that AI promotes “equity,” a left-wing idea that advocates for Black people and other historically marginalized groups to be given the spotlight first. He said he was alarmed by internal reports that he had followed President Biden’s guidelines stating that he should not do so. People of color and other groups who are not historically marginalized, regardless of their accomplishments.
Google’s Gemini was widely ridiculed after it was revealed that the system refused to generate images of white people, instead spitting out “diverse” depictions of Founding Fathers, the Pope, and Vikings.
“Given that Alphabet has censored First Amendment-protected speech in the past as a result of requests and requests from government agencies, the Commission finds that the First Amendment violations that occurred with respect to Alphabet’s Gemini model We are concerned about this possibility,” the letter continued.
Imges Cetin, founder of Genie AI, which focuses on data analytics, said woke AI is a serious issue on the technology horizon.
“It’s written not to write racist or sexist things, but when you do that, it starts to affect the truth. George Washington was not black. So manipulating reality is… It’s a really big risk,” she told the Post.