
The AI biosecurity letter everyone's covering wrong
OpenAI and Anthropic want Congress to regulate DNA synthesis companies, not themselves. That's the real story here.
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Most coverage of this week's open letter from AI executives frames it as "AI leaders want regulation." And sure, technically that's true. But I think we're missing something important here.
The letter, signed by OpenAI's Sam Altman, Anthropic's Dario Amodei, Microsoft's Mustafa Suleyman, and a bunch of scientists, isn't asking Congress to regulate AI companies. It's asking Congress to regulate DNA synthesis companies. That's a pretty significant distinction that's getting lost in the headlines.
What they're actually asking for
The core request is straightforward: require companies that sell synthetic DNA and RNA online to screen orders for dangerous sequences. Right now, you can apparently order genetic material that could theoretically be used to engineer pathogens, and there's no mandatory screening process to catch that.
I should be honest here, I'm not a biosecurity expert. But the basic argument makes sense. AI tools are getting better at helping people understand how to design biological agents. If those same people can then order the raw genetic materials without anyone checking what they're building, that's a gap.
The letter calls it a "biosecurity gap that could help trigger a global pandemic." Strong language, but coming from people who presumably understand what their own models can do.
Why this is interesting (and a little convenient)
Here's where I get a bit skeptical, honestly. This letter lets AI companies look responsible while pushing the regulatory burden onto a completely different industry. DNA synthesis companies would need to implement screening. AI labs would just... keep doing what they're doing.
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