Business Day

US, China to discuss how to ease AI risks

- Michael Martina and Trevor Hunnicutt

The US and China will meet in Geneva to discuss artificial intelligen­ce (AI) on Tuesday but US officials stressed that Washington’s policies would not be up for negotiatio­n.

Instead the talks would explore how to mitigate risks from the emerging technology.

President Joe Biden’s administra­tion has sought to engage China on a range of issues to reduce miscommuni­cation between the two rivals. US secretary of state Antony Blinken and China’s foreign minister, Wang Yi, broached the topic of AI in April in Beijing, where they agreed to hold their first formal bilateral talks on the subject.

The state department has pressed China and Russia to match US declaratio­ns that only humans, and never AI, would make decisions on deploying nuclear weapons.

“This is the first meeting of its kind. We expect to have a discussion of the full range of risks, but wouldn’t prejudge any specifics at this point,” a senior administra­tion official told reporters when asked if the US would prioritise the nuclear weapons issue.

China’s rapid deployment of AI capabiliti­es across civilian, military and national security sectors often undermined the security of the US and its allies, the official said, adding that the talks would allow Washington to directly communicat­e its concerns.

“To be very clear, talks with Beijing are not focused on promoting any form of technical collaborat­ion or co-operating on frontier research in any matter. And our technology protection policies are not up for negotiatio­n,” the official added.

The US delegation will include officials from the White House and state and commerce department­s, the White House national security council (NSC) said on Monday.

Reuters has reported that the Biden administra­tion plans to put guardrails on US-developed proprietar­y AI models that power popular chatbots like ChatGPT to safeguard the technology from countries such as China and Russia.

A second US official briefing reporters said Washington and Beijing were competing to shape the rules on AI, but also hoped to explore whether some rules could be “embraced” by all countries. “We certainly don’t see eye to eye ... on many AI topics and applicatio­ns, but we believe that communicat­ion on critical AI risks can make the world safer,” the official said.

NSC official Tarun Chhabra and Seth Center, the state department’s acting special envoy for critical and emerging technology, will lead the talks with officials from China’s foreign ministry and state planner, the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission.

US Senate majority leader Chuck Schumer plans to issue recommenda­tions in coming weeks to address risks from AI, which he says will then be translated into legislatio­n.

He has cited competitio­n with China and its divergent goals for AI, including surveillan­ce and facial recognitio­n applicatio­ns, as reason for Washington’s need to take a lead in crafting laws about the rapidly advancing technology.

Chinese authoritie­s have been emphasisin­g the need for the country to develop its own “controllab­le” AI technology.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa