A new ad campaign on Monday warned northern New Jersey residents that Congress could leave them vulnerable to harm by artificial intelligence.

The ad, which opens with photos of A.I.-generated women smiling on social media alongside A.I.-generated headlines, urged voters to tell their House representative to vote against a bill that would block states from creating protections against A.I. scams.

“He can make sure A.I. serves us, not the other way around,” the ad said of Josh Gottheimer, the Democratic co-chair of the House’s new A.I. commission, which is expected to heavily influence legislation on the topic. “New Jersey families come before Big Tech’s bottom line.”

The $300,000 ad campaign was paid for by Public First Action, a super PAC backed by the A.I. start-up Anthropic. Focused on New Jersey, the campaign is likely to run several weeks — part of several similar initiatives by the super PAC nationally.

Anthropic, which said this month that it had poured $20 million into the PAC, has taken a different approach from much of the A.I. industry in calling for tough regulation of the technology it is creating. Public First was formed last year to battle other super PACs backed by the leaders and investors of the rival A.I. company OpenAI, which favors a light approach to regulation.

The advertising blitz is part of an escalating political war over A.I. in the run-up to the midterm elections. States and the federal government are at odds over how to regulate the technology. While President Trump has said A.I. regulation could slow down American companies and boost Chinese rivals, states are pushing ahead with their own laws. Companies see the November election as a crucial battleground.

Leading the Future, the main industry-sponsored super PAC backed by venture capital investors and tech leaders, has raised more than $100 million and has $70 million in hand. Meta said last week that it was preparing to spend $65 million to fund two new super PACs this year to boost A.I.-friendly state politicians.

Brad Carson, a former Democratic representative of Oklahoma who is now co-head of Public First, recently lifted the super PAC’s fund-raising goal to $75 million after nearly hitting $50 million.

Anthropic, which was founded by former OpenAI executives, has become a rare tech industry voice calling for A.I. safeguards. The San Francisco company has backed state laws — including in its home state, California — that call for better testing and safety protections. Anthropic successfully lobbied against a provision added to Mr. Trump’s signature spending bill last year that would have blocked state A.I. regulations

OpenAI has won favor with the Trump administration, but Anthropic and Mr. Amodei have been perceived as nuisances. Administration officials including David Sacks, the White House’s A.I. chief, have criticized Anthropic.

Last week, a dispute erupted between the company and the Department of Defense after Anthropic told officials that it did not want its A.I. used for mass surveillance of Americans or deployed in autonomous weapons without human guidance. Last Monday, a person close to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth told Axios that the Pentagon was “close” to declaring the start-up a “supply chain risk,” a move that would sever ties between the company and the U.S. military.

Anthropic executives previously said they had spent at least five months working on a super PAC strategy before announcing their backing for Public First.

Much of Public First’s spending will fund ad campaigns, Mr. Carson said, focusing on educating voters on the need for A.I. regulations to protect child safety, jobs and national security. Public First has also run ads thanking Republican and Democratic lawmakers for supporting A.I. laws.

Posted by John3262005

3 Comments

  1. Despite the possibility that the relationship between Anthropic and the US government could get worse, the company is supporting a super PAC that wants A.I. regulation

    *Anthropic, which was founded by former OpenAI executives, has become a rare tech industry voice calling for A.I. safeguards. The San Francisco company has backed state laws — including in its home state, California — that call for better testing and safety protections. Anthropic successfully lobbied against a provision added to Mr. Trump’s signature spending bill last year that would have blocked state A.I. regulations.*

    I didn’t know this about the company. Congratulations for the company for being the rare voice in the AI business.

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