Random Image Display on Page Reload

The US Patent and Trademark Office Banned Staff From Using Generative AI

Nov 19, 2024 6:00 AM

The US Patent and Trademark Office Banned Staff From Using Generative AI

The agency dedicated to protecting new innovations prohibited almost all internal use of GenAI tools, though employees can still participate in controlled experiments.

The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office seal is displayed inside the headquarters in Alexandria Virginia U.S. on Friday...

The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) official seal.Photograph: Andrew Harrer/Getty Images

The US Patent and Trademark Office banned the use of generative artificial intelligence for any purpose last year, citing security concerns with the technology as well as the propensity of some tools to exhibit “bias, unpredictability, and malicious behavior,” according to an April 2023 internal guidance memo obtained by WIRED through a public records request. Jamie Holcombe, the chief information officer of the USPTO, wrote that the office is “committed to pursuing innovation within our agency” but are still “working to bring these capabilities to the office in a responsible way.”

Paul Fucito, press secretary for the USPTO, clarified to WIRED that employees can use “state-of-the-art generative AI models” at work—but only inside the agency’s internal testing environment. “Innovators from across the USPTO are now using the AI Lab to better understand generative AI's capabilities and limitations and to prototype AI-powered solutions to critical business needs,” Fucito wrote in an email.

Outside of the testing environment, USPTO staff are barred from relying on AI programs like OpenAI’s ChatGPT or Anthropic’s Claude for work tasks. The guidance memo from last year also prohibits the use of any outputs from the tools, including images and videos generated by AI. But Patent Office employees can use some approved AI programs, such as those within the agency’s own public database for looking up registered patents and patent applications. Earlier this year, the USPTO approved a $75 million contract with Accenture Federal Services to update its patent database with enhanced AI-powered search features.

The US Patent and Trademark Office, an agency within the Department of Commerce, is in charge of protecting inventors, awarding patents, and registering trademarks. It also “advises the president of the United States, the secretary of commerce, and US government agencies on intellectual property (IP) policy, protection, and enforcement,” according to the USPTO’s website.

At a Google-sponsored event in 2023, Holcombe, the author of the guidance memo, said government bureaucracy makes it difficult for the public sector to use new technologies. “Everything we do in the government is pretty stupid, when you compare it to the commercial world, right?” he said. Holcombe specifically cited cumbersome budgeting, procurement, and compliance processes, arguing that they hamper the government's ability to rapidly adopt innovations like artificial intelligence.

The USPTO is not the only government agency to ban staff from using generative AI, at least for some purposes. Earlier this year, the National Archives and Records Administration prohibited the use of ChatGPT on government-issued laptops, according to 404 Media. But soon afterward, the National Archives hosted an internal presentation that encouraged employees to “think of [Google’s] Gemini as a co-worker.” During the meeting, some archivists reportedly expressed concerns about the accuracy of generative AI. Next month, the National Archives is planning to release a new public chatbot for accessing archival records developed with technology from Google.

Other US government agencies are using—or avoiding—generative AI in different ways. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration, for example, specifically banned the use of AI chatbots for sensitive data. NASA did decide, however, to experiment with the technology for writing code and summarizing research. The agency also announced last week that it’s working with Microsoft on an AI chatbot that can aggregate satellite data to make it easily searchable. That tool is currently available only to NASA scientists and researchers, but the goal is to “democratize access to spaceborne data.”

Reece Rogers is WIRED's service writer, focused on explaining crucial topics and helping readers get the most out of their technology. He is the author of the popular AI Unlocked newsletter series that helps you make the most of AI tools—sign up here. Prior to WIRED, Reece covered… Read more
Service Writer

    Read More

    New York Times Says OpenAI Erased Potential Lawsuit Evidence

    As part of an ongoing copyright lawsuit, The New York Times says it spent 150 hours sifting through OpenAI’s training data looking for potential evidence—only for OpenAI to delete all of its work.
    Kate Knibbs

    Elon Musk’s Criticism of ‘Woke AI’ Suggests ChatGPT Could Be a Trump Administration Target

    If you think the United States is politically divided now, just wait for the AI culture wars.
    Will Knight

    Some of Substack’s Biggest Writers Rely On AI Writing Tools

    A new analysis of Substack’s top newsletters estimated that around 10 percent publish AI-generated or AI-assisted content.
    Kate Knibbs

    OpenAI Scored a Legal Win Over Progressive Publishers—but the Fight’s Not Finished

    A judge tossed out a case against OpenAI brought by Alternet and Raw Story, in what could be a significant ruling in the larger battle between AI companies and publishers.
    Kate Knibbs

    Perplexity Dove Into Real-Time Election Tracking While Other AI Companies Held Back

    The controversial AI search engine, accused of aggressively scraping content, went all in on providing AI-generated election information.
    Will Knight

    More Spyware, Fewer Rules: What Trump’s Return Means for US Cybersecurity

    Experts expect Donald Trump’s next administration to relax cybersecurity rules on businesses, abandon concerns around human rights, and take an aggressive stance against the cyber armies of US adversaries.
    Eric Geller

    How Best to Use ChatGPT, Gemini, and Other AI Tools? Our AI Expert Answers Your Questions

    If you missed our live, subscriber-only Q&A with WIRED’s AI columnist Reece Rogers, you can watch this replay of the livestream.
    Michael Calore

    AI Slop Is Flooding Medium

    The blogging platform Medium is facing an influx of AI-generated content. CEO Tony Stubblebine says it “doesn’t matter” as long as nobody reads it.
    Kate Knibbs

    Anyone Can Buy Data Tracking US Soldiers and Spies to Nuclear Vaults and Brothels in Germany

    More than 3 billion phone coordinates collected by a US data broker expose the detailed movements of US military and intelligence workers in Germany—and the Pentagon is powerless to stop it.
    Dhruv Mehrotra

    Why the US Government Banned Investments in Some Chinese AI Startups

    The Biden administration targeted Chinese companies developing frontier AI models, but Donald Trump could take a more sweeping approach.
    Zeyi Yang

    The Incredible Power of Quantum Memory

    Researchers are exploring new ways that quantum computers will be able to reveal the secrets of complex quantum systems.
    Lakshmi Chandrasekaran

    AI Will Understand Humans Better Than Humans Do

    Or so says a controversial Stanford researcher, who finds that the latest systems have, against all odds, mastered a high-level cognitive skill.
    Steven Levy

    *****
    Credit belongs to : www.wired.com

    Check Also

    Phone Maker Xiaomi Made the Car That Apple Couldn’t

    Alistair Charlton Gear Nov 26, 2024 8:43 AM Phone Maker Xiaomi Made the Car That …