The group will give recommendations to Google and other companies on AI technologies, such as facial recognition software, according to the report. It will comprise eight members, including former U.S. Deputy Secretary of State William J. Burns.
“We want to have the most informed and thoughtful conversations we can,” Google Senior Vice President for Global Affairs Kent Walker said during a presentation at a Cambridge-based Massachusetts Institute of Technology conference in San Francisco, according to Reuters. “We want to sit down with the council and see what agenda they want to set.”
More articles on artificial intelligence:
AI may help detect ICU patient mobility, study shows
JPMorgan Chase awards AI research grants to universities, PhD students
Microsoft, DNA analysis startup to develop algorithm to predict heart disease