President Biden Oct. 30  federal agencies to take certain actions to protect Americans from the potential risks of artificial intelligence systems while promoting innovation and competition. The executive order calls for the Department of Health and Human Services to establish a safety program to regulate health care AI practices and for developers of high-risk AI systems to share their safety testing results and other relevant information with the federal government. Among other actions, the order urges Congress to enact data privacy safeguards for Americans, and requires federal agencies to develop best practices to investigate and prosecute AI-related discrimination and guidelines to prevent fraudulent and deceptive AI-generated content.

Related News Articles

Headline
Cleveland Clinic's Eric Boose, M.D., family medicine physician and associate chief medical information officer and Rohit Chandra, executive vice president and…
Headline
The National Institutes of Health April 3 released a study that found an artificial intelligence screening tool was as effective as health care providers in…
Perspective
Public
America’s hospitals and health systems are incubators of innovation, ideas and medical progress as they are constantly striving to improve patient care and…
Headline
A ChatGPT vulnerability identified last year is being used by cyberthreat actors to attack security flaws in artificial intelligence systems, according to a…
Headline
In this conversation, Dave Newman, M.D., vice president and chief medical officer for virtual care at Sanford Health, discusses how innovative virtual care…
Headline
The AHA participated Feb. 18 at ViVE, a health care conference in Nashville focusing on digital health technology. Chris DeRienzo, M.D., AHA senior vice…