Hardware-Enabled Governance
InternationalTechnical mechanisms built into AI chips enabling monitoring, access control, and enforcement of AI governance policies. RAND analysis identifies attestation-based licensing as most feasible with 5-10 year timeline, while an estimated 100,000+ export-controlled GPUs were smuggled to China in 2024.
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Compute Monitoring
This framework analyzes compute monitoring approaches for AI governance, finding that cloud KYC (targeting 10^26 FLOP threshold) is implementable n...
Compute Thresholds
Analysis of compute thresholds as regulatory triggers, examining current implementations (EU AI Act at 10^25 FLOP, US EO at 10^26 FLOP), their effe...
US AI Chip Export Controls
US restrictions on semiconductor exports targeting China have disrupted near-term AI development but face significant limitations. Analysis finds c...
International Compute Regimes
Multilateral coordination mechanisms for AI compute governance, exploring pathways from non-binding declarations to comprehensive treaties. Assessm...
MAIM (Mutually Assured AI Malfunction)
A deterrence framework proposed by Dan Hendrycks, Eric Schmidt, and Alexandr Wang in which rival states prevent unilateral AI dominance through the...
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Quick Facts
- Introduced
- 2024
- Status
- Research phase; early proposals
- Scope
- International