New Delhi: The future of AI will be shaped by a contest between “democratic AI” and “autocratic AI,” OpenAI’s chief global affairs officer Chris Lehane said on Friday, arguing that how countries govern the technology will determine whether it empowers individuals or entrenches state control.Lehane told TOI the divide is visible in the growing strategic competition between the US and China, and that large democracies, particularly India, will play a decisive role. He described “democratic AI” as systems that are “open, transparent, follow the rule of law” and function as “a tool for an individual to scale their capabilities, to learn, think, build, create, produce.” In contrast, AI developed in “autocratic systems” is “designed to enhance the central authority, the authoritarian govt,” rather than empower individuals.Governance, he suggested, is central to the race. Citing Russian President Vladimir Putin’s remark that whoever leads in AI will “win the world,” Lehane argued that the values embedded in AI systems will shape the global order that emerges.On oversight, he said new rules are inevitable for a general purpose technology. AI safety institutes are emerging in the US and the UK, with India exploring a similar approach. Asked whether OpenAI would support audits of its advanced systems, Lehane said the company is subject to transparency requirements under safety frameworks in US states such as California and New York and works with safety institutes in the US and UK. He drew a distinction between transparency and disclosure of proprietary information, noting concerns about protecting intellectual property. Baseline safety standards can be developed collectively, he said, but countries should retain the ability to deploy AI consistent with societal contexts. For India, the stakes are high.
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