Task Force Wants to Hear From Rhode Islanders About AI

A computer screen reflects a window and shows the default prompt when opening ChatGPT, a popular generative AI application often credited with igniting the AI boom since its release in 2022.
A computer screen reflects a window and shows the default prompt when opening ChatGPT, a popular generative AI application often credited with igniting the AI boom since its release in 2022.
Alexander Castro/Rhode Island Current
2 min read
Share
A computer screen reflects a window and shows the default prompt when opening ChatGPT, a popular generative AI application often credited with igniting the AI boom since its release in 2022.
A computer screen reflects a window and shows the default prompt when opening ChatGPT, a popular generative AI application often credited with igniting the AI boom since its release in 2022.
Alexander Castro/Rhode Island Current
Task Force Wants to Hear From Rhode Islanders About AI
Copy

State officials are curious about how Rhode Islanders are using artificial intelligence (AI).

The Rhode Island Artificial Intelligence Task Force and Gov. Dan McKee launched a new survey Friday asking Rhode Islanders how they feel about AI and how they’re using it. The survey is open through May 9 and takes about 10 minutes to complete, but can take longer depending on the length of one’s responses to write-in questions.

“We’re positioning Rhode Island as a national leader in AI, cybersecurity, and other emerging technologies,” McKee said in a statement. “Our goal is to harness the benefits of AI for our local economy while mitigating potential risks through thoughtful policy and planning. It’s important to hear from Rhode Islanders as we continue to shape the future of AI in RI.”

McKee assembled the AI Task Force in February 2024 to investigate how the Ocean State can responsibly use and build policy around the rapidly expanding and increasingly popular set of technologies colloquially referred to as AI. The rise of generative AI since 2022 has especially shaped widespread consumer and industry use of programs that can create text and images, analyze data, or perform an assortment of mundane tasks. The group includes representatives from multiple sectors including state government, tech, health care, education, business and other sectors.

The committee is chaired by former U.S. Rep. Jim Langevin, who also chairs the Institute of Cybersecurity and Emerging Technologies at Rhode Island College, another McKee-led project. Chris Parisi, the founder and CEO of Trailblaze Marketing in Providence, serves as the task force’s vice chair.

“The AI Task Force is hard at work to identify the most effective ways Rhode Island can harness the power of this emerging technology while minimizing the risks it brings,” Langevin said in a statement. “As we create our roadmap, we’re asking the public to offer their insights on if and how they’d like to see artificial intelligence implemented across the state, as well as to share any concerns about the future of this technology.”

The survey has five sections, from queries about respondents’ basic familiarity with AI to how people use AI in their job. Questions about on-the-job usage are tailored to the industry selected from a list, which includes government, finance, education, health care, manufacturing/trade/defense, and small businesses/nonprofits/start-ups.

Questions across the survey include “How has AI changed your job in the past 2 years?,” “What do you believe are the biggest opportunities AI brings to Rhode Island?” and “Do you believe AI should be regulated?”

A final section, “AI and the Future of Rhode Island,” invites respondents to muse on whether Rhode Island should or should not “position itself as a leader in AI.”

Respondents can include their email address to receive future updates and information about events, including those with potentially more opportunities for public feedback, from the AI task force.

This story was originally published by the Rhode Island Current.

Prevost, who will take the name Leo XIV, was elected as the first American pope in the 2,000-year history of the Catholic Church
Despite covering more than half the planet, the deep ocean remains largely unexplored, with less than 0.001% of its seafloor directly observed, researchers say
Fleeing British persecution, 26-year-old printer Isaiah Thomas turned his Massachusetts Spy into one of the first war-reporting newspapers — helping fuel the fight for American independence from his new home in Worcester
‘Tax the rich’ supporters see their best chance yet. But House leadership is noncommittal so far.
The newest installment of the hit reality franchise will spotlight longtime friendships, family ties, and high-stakes drama set against Rhode Island’s coastal charm — though it won’t qualify for state film tax credits
Rhode Island joins 20 other states in winning a preliminary injunction against President Trump’s attempt to eliminate federal library funding through the Institute of Museum and Library Services
State economies, energy prices and climate change goals at risk under federal pause in offshore wind development