Insider Q&A: CIA's chief technologist's cautious embrace of generative AI
Knowledge advantage can save lives, win wars and avert disaster. At the Central Intelligence Agency, basic artificial intelligence – machine learning and algorithms – has long served that mission. Now, generative AI is joining the effort.
CIA Director William Burns says AI tech will augment humans, not replace them. The agency’s first chief technology officer, Nand Mulchandani, is marshaling the tools. There’s considerable urgency: Adversaries are already spreading AI-generated deepfakes aimed at undermining U.S. interests.
A former Silicon Valley CEO who helmed successful startups, Mulchandani was named to the job in 2022 after a stint at the Pentagon’s Joint Artificial Intelligence Center.
Among projects he oversees: A ChatGPT-like generative AI application that draws on open-source data (meaning unclassified, public or commercially available). Thousands of analysts across the 18-agency U.S. intelligence community use it. Other CIA projects that use large-language models are, unsurprisingly, secret.
Related articles
Uber and Lyft say they'll stay in Minnesota after Legislature passes driver pay compromise
ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — Uber and Lyft plan to keep operating in Minnesota after the state Legislature2024-05-21Remote Daliang Mountain in SW China Sees Departure of First Bullet Train
Contact Us HomeNewsHighlightACWF NewsSocietyWom2024-05-21China Focus: China to Deliver Improved Community Services to Both Urban, Rural Dwellers
Contact Us HomeNewsHighlightACWF NewsSocietyWom2024-05-21China to Enhance Regulation of Off
Contact Us HomeNewsHighlightACWF NewsSocietyWom2024-05-21The fightback begins: Boss of London's Queen Mary University tells pro
A university boss has been praised after telling a pro-Gaza student mob he will not meet them until2024-05-21China to Launch TCM Pilot Projects on Myopia Prevention
Contact Us HomeNewsHighlightACWF NewsSocietyWom2024-05-21
atest comment