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        Microsoft Ramping Up Its 'Responsible AI Program'
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
- May 02, 2023
Microsoft this week announced it will be increasing its hiring to support its "responsible AI" efforts.     
Bringing in new talent is one of the three essential areas  for ensuring responsible artificial intelligence (AI) at Microsoft, according  to Natasha Crampton, Microsoft's chief responsible AI officer, in a  Monday "Microsoft on the Issues" announcement. The first prong in  that strategy is having committed leadership at Microsoft on responsible AI. Such  leadership is organized via the Responsible AI Council, overseen by Brad Smith,  Microsoft's president, and Kevin Scott, Microsoft's chief technology officer. 
The second strategic approach is building governance models for  responsible AI. To that end, Microsoft recently published the second version of  its Responsible  AI Standard, "which is our internal playbook for how to build AI  systems responsibly," Crampton noted. 
Microsoft's third responsible AI approach is to "invest  in and empower your people." Here's where Crampton suggested that  Microsoft may be seeking to hire more people to support its responsible AI  efforts:
Moving forward, we know we need  to invest even more in our responsible AI ecosystem by hiring new and diverse  talent, assigning additional talent to focus on responsible AI full time, and  upskilling more people throughout the company. We have leadership commitments  to do just that and will share more about our progress in the coming months.
The timing for Microsoft's new responsible AI hiring efforts  wasn't described. Crampton explained that Microsoft currently has "nearly  350 people working on responsible AI," but just 129 of them are doing it  full time. 
The announcement also included a confirmation about Microsoft's  dissolution of its Ethics and Society team, which had pioneered responsible AI  at Microsoft. Crampton largely confirmed the dispersal and eventual elimination  of that team, as originally  reported back in March by Platformer, a Silicon Valley news outlet. The  team's elimination had drawn "considerable attention," Crampton  noted. 
"No decision affecting our colleagues is easy, but it  was one guided by our experience of the most effective organizational  structures to ensure our responsible AI practices are adopted across the  company," Crampton said regarding the dissolved Ethics and Society team. 
All told, seven members of the Ethics and Society team were  let go by Microsoft, with the majority of the team getting absorbed elsewhere  at Microsoft. 
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.