The Bredemarket blog has previously considered how private companies like Samsung and Adobe use generative AI. Government use is similar, yet differs in some ways. Let’s see how San Jose, California approaches it.

As GovTech reported in its article “San Jose Releases Generative AI Guidelines, Looks to Learn,” some of the concerns of San Jose’s city governments are similar to issues with which private companies grapple.
Privacy is also a concern, and IT advises generative AI users to assume any information entered will be exposed to the public. Materials unready for publication shouldn’t be entered, nor should private emails. Employees looking for help drafting emails should avoid copy-pasting messages into generative AI, instead prompting the tools to write a generic message they can fact-check or augment with personalized details. The guidelines advise users to fact-check with multiple credible sources, including peer-reviewed journals and official documents.
From https://www.govtech.com/artificial-intelligence/san-jose-releases-generative-ai-guidelines-looks-to-learn
This is a big concern for private companies, also.
But there are also issues that governments need to consider that private companies may not need to address.
One consideration is that government writing requires a particular style. Senate bills, for example, are written with a certain structure and formality. The city also uses gender-neutral language and the term “resident” rather than “citizen.”
From https://www.govtech.com/artificial-intelligence/san-jose-releases-generative-ai-guidelines-looks-to-learn
Of course private companies have their own writing styles, but the world won’t come to an end if the IBM memorandum includes the word “gnarly.” But the wrong word in a Senate bill, or the use of the term “citizen” in a blue state, could be catastrophic.
One thing is clear: San Jose Chief Information Officer Khaled Tawfik doesn’t think that general-purpose generative AI will cut it.
San Jose has talked with several vendors about the possibility of AI trained on data from government, potentially restricted to San Jose data only.
From https://www.govtech.com/artificial-intelligence/san-jose-releases-generative-ai-guidelines-looks-to-learn
As I noted in my post about Writer.com, this also allows implementation of privacy restrictions that could help avert problems if an employee inputs confidential information into the tool.
For the moment, San Jose is asking employees and contractors to log all use of generative AI. This will be referenced as the city develops its guidelines and policies in the future. As the city says:
Generative Artificial Intelligence (AI) is a new branch of AI technology that can generate content—such as stories, poetry, images, voice, and music— at the request of a user. Many organizations have banned Generative AI, while others allow unrestricted usage. The City recognizes the opportunity for a controlled and responsible approach that acknowledges the benefits to efficiency while minimizing the risks around AI bias, privacy, and cybersecurity.
This is the first step in a collaborative process to develop the City’s overall AI policy. Registered users will be invited to join the Information Technology Department in a working group to share their experience and co-develop the City’s AI policies.
From https://www.sanjoseca.gov/your-government/departments-offices/information-technology/itd-generative-ai-guideline

1 Comment