A grassroots movement is forming among everyday technology workers who are demanding that their companies develop and deploy AI responsibly. And Guardrails Alliance, a new super PAC dedicated to supporting AI legislation, aims to capitalize on that dissatisfaction.
Democratic operatives Shauna Thomas and Leah Hunt-Hendricks launched the Guardrail Alliance on Thursday with support from tech workers, unions and other groups, The New York Times reported.
“Our fundamental belief here is that people still have the power to stop the Trump administration and its authoritarian takeover of the tech industry,” Thomas told the NYT.
Guardrails positions itself as a populist political movement funded by small donations from those on the front lines of the AI boom. PAC currently has about $5 million in cash at its disposal and is on track to raise $15 million this cycle, which is dwarfed by deep-pocketed opponents like Leading the Future, which has raised more than $100 million from technology leaders like OpenAI President Greg Brockman.
Guardrails will be Leading the Future’s first target, purchasing ads to support New York State Congressional candidate Alex Boaz, who is running in next week’s primary. On Thursday, Boaz shared an ad with ChatGPT featuring the parents of Adam Lane, a teenage boy who died by suicide after months of lengthy conversations.
Mr. Boas also has support from Public First Action, another legislative super PAC backed by Anthropic.
While OpenAI has tried to distance itself from Brockman’s donations, many employees are reportedly unconvinced, and some have expressed concern about Leading the Future’s attacks on Boas on social media.
This year, tech workers also called on the secretaries to terminate contracts with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and called on the Department of Defense to rescind Anthropic’s supply chain risk designation. Critics say the designation was imposed without due process in retaliation for Anthropic’s efforts to limit technology used for mass surveillance and autonomous warfare.
“This is not about matching dollars to dollars (leading the future),” Thomas said. “The purpose of this vehicle is to serve as a political hub for those concerned about the ways in which the anti-regulatory AI technology sector is attempting to manipulate elections.”
TechCrunch collaborated with Guardrails Alliance.
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