2026年5月28日 美国东部时间下午6:00 / 福克斯新闻
在保护公众利益与推动技术进步之间出现代际分歧
作者:维多利亚·巴拉拉 福克斯新闻
教皇利奥十四世警告硅谷加强人工智能监管
教皇利奥十四世向硅谷传递讯息,呼吁对人工智能实施强有力的监管,以确保其服务于公共利益。库尔特·“电脑专家”·纳特松将就梵蒂冈与包括Meta、谷歌和亚马逊在内的科技巨头的会晤发表看法。
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随着人工智能(AI)监管相关辩论愈演愈烈,最新的福克斯新闻民调显示,大多数登记选民认为联邦政府迫切需要解决这一问题,且保障公众利益应优先于推动技术创新。
近八成选民认为政府应对AI监管问题采取行动极为迫切(40%)或非常迫切(37%)。
福克斯新闻民调:美国民众对高等教育的信任度正在崩塌
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此外,尽管超半数受访者认为联邦政府(51%)和科技行业(54%)都应承担重大责任,但认为应由科技行业承担责任的选民略多。另有39%的受访者认为州政府应承担重大责任。
尽管不同 demographic 群体的选民普遍认为AI监管至关重要,且政府和科技行业都负有责任,但在紧迫性问题上存在显著的代际分歧。
福克斯新闻民调:选民认为福利欺诈普遍存在,仍多数倾向于保护福利而非严厉打击
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年龄在30岁以下的选民中,认为监管AI刻不容缓的比例为69%,而65岁及以上选民的这一比例为84%,两者相差15个百分点。
当被问及应优先制定哪些监管措施时,80%的选民更倾向于保护公众利益,仅有19%的选民支持推动技术创新,差距达61个百分点。
尽管所有年龄段的多数选民都将保护公众利益放在首位,但仍存在代际差异:30岁以下的选民中有三分之二(66%)支持优先保护公众利益,而65岁及以上的选民中这一比例接近九成(88%)。
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党派分歧相对较小,不过民主党(83%)和无党派选民(82%)比共和党(77%)更倾向于将保护公众利益放在优先位置。
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尽管多数选民都认为需要对AI进行监管,但在是否应由美国与其他国家协调监管这一问题上存在分歧:51%的受访者支持协调行动,49%的受访者更倾向于美国独立行动。
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这一代际差距并不明显,30岁以下的选民意见存在分歧(49%支持协调,50%支持独立行动),而65岁及以上的选民则以9个百分点的优势支持与他国协调(54% vs 45%)。
党派分歧则更为明显:六成民主党人支持与其他国家协调监管,而六成共和党人支持美国独立行动。
无党派选民意见持平,各占50%。
本次民调于2026年5月15日至18日由Beacon Research(民主党)和Shaw & Company Research(共和党)主导开展,福克斯新闻的这项调查共采访了1002名从全国选民档案中随机抽取的登记选民。受访者通过固定电话(109人)、手机(635人)或收到短信后在线完成调查(258人)。基于全部样本的抽样误差范围为±3个百分点。针对子群体的调查结果抽样误差更高。除抽样误差外,问题措辞和顺序也可能影响调查结果。通常会对年龄、种族、教育程度和地区变量进行加权处理,以确保人口统计数据能够代表登记选民群体。权重制定的参考依据包括最新的美国社区调查、福克斯新闻选民分析以及选民档案数据。
Fox News Poll: Voters see AI regulation as urgent, rank safeguards ahead of innovation
May 28, 2026 6:00pm EDT / Fox News
Generational divide emerges on protecting public vs tech advancement
By Victoria Balara, Fox News
Pope Leo XIV warns Silicon Valley about artificial intelligence regulation
Pope Leo XIV sends a message to Silicon Valley, calling for strong AI oversight to ensure that it serves the common good. Kurt ‘CyberGuy’ Knutsson discusses the Vatican’s meetings with tech leaders including Meta, Google and Amazon.
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As debates about artificial intelligence (AI) regulation intensify, the latest Fox News Poll finds that most registered voters believe it is urgent for the federal government to address the issue, and protecting the public interest should take priority over promoting innovation.
Nearly 8 in 10 think it is extremely (40%) or very (37%) urgent for the government to address AI regulations.
FOX NEWS POLL: FAITH IN HIGHER EDUCATION IN THE US IS COLLAPSING
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In addition, while more than half say both the federal government (51%) and the tech industry (54%) should have a great deal of responsibility, slightly more say it should fall to the tech side. Another 39% say state governments should have a great deal of responsibility.
While voters across demographic groups broadly agree AI regulation is vital and both government and the tech industry have responsibility, there is a notable generational divide on urgency.
FOX NEWS POLL: VOTERS SEE WELFARE FRAUD AS COMMON, STILL MOSTLY FAVOR PROTECTING BENEFITS OVER CRACKDOWNS
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By a 15-point margin, fewer voters under age 30 view regulating AI as urgent (69%) than those ages 65 and over (84%).
When asked what regulations should be prioritized, more voters favor protecting public interests (80%) than promoting innovation (19%) by a 61-point margin.
While majorities of all age groups prioritize protecting the public, there is still a generational divide: two-thirds of those under 30 favor it (66%), compared to nearly 9 in 10 voters ages 65+ (88%).
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Partisan differences are smaller, though Democrats (83%) and independents (82%) are somewhat more likely than Republicans (77%) to prioritize protecting the public interest.
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While voters largely agree AI regulation is needed, they are split on whether the U.S. should coordinate with other countries: 51% favor coordination, while 49% prefer the U.S. act independently.
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The generational gap is less pronounced here, as voters under 30 are divided (49% coordinate vs. 50% act independently) while voters 65 and over favor coordinating with others by 9 points (54% vs. 45%).
Partisan divisions are starker, as 6 in 10 Democrats favor coordinating with other countries while 6 in 10 Republicans back acting independently.
Independents are divided, 50% each.
Conducted May 15–18, 2026, under the direction of Beacon Research (D) and Shaw & Company Research (R), this Fox News survey includes interviews with a sample of 1,002 registered voters randomly selected from a national voter file. Respondents spoke with live interviewers on landlines (109) and cellphones (635) or completed the survey online after receiving a text (258). Results based on the full sample have a margin of sampling error of ±3 percentage points. Sampling error for results among subgroups is higher. In addition to sampling error, question wording and order can influence results. Weights are generally applied to age, race, education, and area variables to ensure the demographics are representative of the registered voter population. Sources for developing weight targets include the most recent American Community Survey, Fox News Voter Analysis, and voter file data.
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