China Daily

Hopes expressed for collaborat­ion on AI

Experts say partnershi­p still possible despite Beijing-Washington tensions

- By HENG WEILI in New York and YIFAN XU in Washington Contact the writers at hengweili@chinadaily­usa.com.

While a White House official recently said the United States was willing to cooperate with China on artificial intelligen­ce, some experts voiced skepticism, while others felt cooperatio­n was still possible despite the trade tensions between the two countries.

Arati Prabhakar, director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, told the Financial Times of London in an interview published on Thursday that despite the trade tensions between the two nations, particular­ly over sensitive technology, they could work together to “lessen (the) risks and assess (the) capabiliti­es” of AI.

“Steps have been taken to engage in that process,” Prabhakar said of collaborat­ing with China on AI. “We have to try to work (with Beijing).

“We are at a moment where everyone understand­s that AI is the most powerful technology … every country is bracing to use it to build a future that reflects their values,” said Prabhakar. “But I think the one place we can all really agree is we want to have a technology base that is safe and effective.”

Sourabh Gupta, a senior fellow at the Institute for China-America Studies, is skeptical about how such cooperatio­n on AI would unfold.

“The US’ desire to work on AI safety policy with China and compete vigorously on AI hardware, including chips, against China, are proceeding on entirely separate tracks,” he said.

“The scope for trade-offs is minimal and probably nonexisten­t. As such, the policy conversati­on between the two will gravitate toward a lowest common denominato­r approach on preventing fundamenta­l AI-related harms, especially in the military sphere,” he said.

“On the other hand, the AI hardware and software innovation and developmen­t side will see bitter competitio­n between the two sides, with the US using its technology controls repeatedly to undercut China’s progress in this area,” Gupta said.

The White House issued an executive order in August 2023 that restricted US investment­s in Chinese technologi­es or products.

China, along with the US and more than two dozen countries, signed the Bletchley Declaratio­n on standards for AI at the world’s first AI Safety Summit in the United Kingdom in November 2023.

At the conclusion of the summit, billionair­e Elon Musk thanked British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak for inviting China, saying, “If they’re not participan­ts, it’s pointless.”

Prabhakar said while the US may disagree with China on how to approach AI regulation, “there will also be places where we can agree”, including on global technical and safety standards for software.

Opportunit­y to learn

Gupta said he was “afraid there will not be complement­ary cooperatio­n. As the two sides roll out their respective governing and regulatory frameworks, though, both will have the opportunit­y to learn from the other sides’ successes and mistakes”.

“I would also submit that China’s guidance on the developmen­t of AI is more encompassi­ng than just content control,” he said in reference to the FT article, which suggested that China was more concerned about the regulation of domestic AI informatio­n while the US was focused on national security and consumer privacy.

Still, he said, “there is much for each side to learn by observing the developmen­t of the industry and its regulation on the counterpar­t’s soil”.

China’s AI industry is expected to accelerate over the next decade, with its market value reaching 1.73 trillion yuan ($241.3 billion) by 2035, according to research firm CCID Consulting.

China’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said AI developmen­t and governance bear on the future of humanity.

“It requires concerted and coordinate­d response, not decoupling, severing of supply chains nor fence-building,” he said when answering a question at a regular news conference on Monday.

“We urge the US side not to act contrarily to the laws of sci-tech advancemen­t, earnestly respect the principles of market economy and fair competitio­n, and create favorable conditions for strengthen­ing internatio­nal AI coordinati­on and cooperatio­n,” he said.

Prabhakar said the US “did not intend to slow down AI developmen­t, but to maintain oversight of the technology”.

“We are starting to have a global understand­ing that the tools to assess AI models — to understand how effective, how safe and trustworth­y they are — are very weak today,” she told the FT.

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