The U.S. Department of Commerce has put together a committee to advise President Joe Biden and other federal agencies on issues related to artificial intelligence (AI), according to a press release.
The committee — dubbed the National Artificial Intelligence Advisory Committee (NAIAC) — will attempt to recruit “top-level candidates,” the release stated. The Commerce Department is also looking to fill out the Subcommittee on Artificial Intelligence and Law Enforcement.
The NAIAC was established as part of the National AI Initiative Act of 2020 and its charge is to give recommendations on U.S. AI competitiveness, workforce equity, funding, research and development, international cooperation, legal issues and more, according to the release.
“We have seen major advances in the design, development and use of AI, especially in the past several years,” said White House Office of Science and Technology Policy Director Eric Lander in the release. “We must be sure that these advances are matched by similar progress in ensuring that AI is trustworthy and that it ensures fairness and protections for civil rights.”
The AI advisory committee will include members from academia, industry, nonprofits and federal laboratories, the release stated. The National Institute of Standards and Technology will offer administrative support to the committee.
In other news, AI-powered conversational communications platform Drips is expanding its healthcare industry presence by way of strategic partnerships with market leaders, including some healthcare payers, a durable medical equipment provider and a Fortune 500 healthcare service provider.
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Drips enables healthcare organizations to “hold two-way, humanized conversations at scale” while also expanding Medicare services and closing both care and payment gaps.
Earlier this week, Vic.ai Co-Founder and CEO Alexander Hagerup said autonomous accounting can help enterprise firms save time and money in their operations by being increasingly nimble.
Read more: Vic.ai CEO: Accounting Needs AI-Driven Overhaul to Streamline Invoice Processing
Vic.ai received $50 million in Series B funding to boost the adoption of its AI platform to help companies streamline invoice processing.