
A democratic candidate for mayor of Cheyenne, Wyoming, who ran in the primary election on Tuesday promised voters that he would help an OpenAI synthetic knowledge bot to make decisions for the town.
In a Laramie County media release released in July, officers made it clear that in response to concerns about an artificial intelligence candidate running for mayor, 42-year-old Victor Miller may be listed alongside five different candidates for Cheyenne’s president. The press release noted,” there is no Artificial Intelligence ( AI ) candidate running for office in Laramie County” . ,
However, The Washington Post , reported that Miller recently appeared at a meet-and-greet event, which featured a podium with the phrases” AI FOR MAYOR”. The candidate, who is 42, claimed that if he were elected, he would let the area to be run by an unnatural knowledge app known as “VIC” or Virtual Integrated Citizen.
Miller claimed that the artificial intelligence app would enable the area to be run without errors and honestly. However, according to the outlet, Wyoming Secretary of State Chuck Gray cited” major problems” regarding allowing the artificial intelligence app to cast ballots because the legislator must be a real man.
However, Cheyenne City Clerk Kristina Jones claimed that Miller was still listed as” the applicant for poll” in his application despite his decision to seek guidance from an AI app. ”  ,
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Miller told The Washington Post that if elected, he would hold in-person hearings and may help the artificial intelligence app to make legislative choices.
The Washington Post reported that Miller actually applied for” VIC” to emerge as the president’s label on the program.
Laramie County authorities stated that allowing the artificial intelligence app to be listed as a member had both offend Wyoming rules and create confusion among voters.  , VIC is not a documented vote. So, VIC may run for office in Wyoming and the title does not look on Laramie County’s formal vote. ”  ,
Rick Coppinger, who ran against Miller in Tuesday’s primary vote, told The Washington Post”, If people believe AI will move their capital better than people treatment, then we have issues.”
Throughout his plan, Miller experienced pushback from OpenAI. The business shut down VIC’s people operations because it broke business rules prohibiting the use of artificial intelligence technology for political campaigns. According to The Washington Post, OpenAI after completely shut down Miller’s account exposure, but, the mayoral candidate created another profile and developed a minute” VIC “bot.
According to News Nation, Miller actually lost his battle on Tuesday, preventing the area from being run by an artificial brains bot.