Artificial Intelligence Is Too Important To Be Policed By AI
Artificial Intelligence Is Too Important To Be Policed By AI
Publish Date: 2026-02-26 09:00:00
Source Domain: www.forbes.com
The Claude by Anthropic app logo appears on the screen of a smartphone in Reno, United States, on November 21, 2024. (Photo by Jaque Silva/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
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“If you’re the police, who will police the police?” That’s what Lisa Simpson asked Homer in an episode from long ago. Fortunately for viewers, The Simpsons is a comedy as was Homer’s creation of his vigilante group.
Still, the question posed by Lisa rates serious thought as Artificial Intelligence (AI) evolves from curiosity to a fact of life. Questions arise about AI guardrails. Exactly because it will do, and crucially think for us, it’s essential that AI be policed.
Those creating the AI future don’t dispute the importance of human oversight. For AI to achieve its limitless potential, there must be trust in it from the same human population that has given it life.
Which requires a brief digression, but a useful one to Nvidia co-founder and chief executive officer Jensen Huang. Huang has long cautioned those fearful of AI taking on a life of its own by reminding them that AI is decidedly not autonomous, that “All it’s doing is processing data.”
Yes, AI is ultimately machines. Crucially, those machines can and will be turned on and off by humans. Which is the point.
The public needs to know there are humans at the proverbial AI controls. Which explains the approach taken to its ever-evolving technology by OpenAI. There’s a recognition that what gives AI potential is what similarly requires that it be watched. Translated, OpenAI employs a growing army of humans to review inputs and outputs, and that’s always looking for crimes to report.
Notable here is that this human input has already proven successful. Data from the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC) indicates that OpenAI’s technology “catches the bad guys,” with over 75,000 NCMEC reports in the first half of 2025 alone. It speaks to the remarkable potential of AI.
As opposed…