Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Sunak hails success of AI summit in U.K.

- KELVIN CHAN AND JILL LAWLESS

BLETCHLEY PARK, England — British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said Thursday that achievemen­ts at the first internatio­nal AI Safety Summit would “tip the balance in favor of humanity” in the race to contain the risks from rapid advances in cutting-edge artificial intelligen­ce.

Speaking after two days of talks at Bletchley Park, a former codebreaki­ng spy base near London, Sunak said agreements struck at the meeting of politician­s, researcher­s and business leaders “show that we have both the political will and the capability to control this technology, and secure its benefits for the long term.”

Sunak organized the summit as a forum for officials, experts and the tech industry to better understand cutting-edge, “frontier” AI that some scientists warn could pose a risk to humanity’s very existence.

He hailed the gathering’s achievemen­ts, including a “Bletchley Declaratio­n” committing nations to tackle the biggest threats from artificial intelligen­ce, a deal to vet tech firms’ AI models before their release, and an agreement to call together a global expert panel on AI, inspired by the United Nations’ climate change panel.

Some argue that government­s must go further and faster on oversight. Britain has no plans for specific legislatio­n to regulate AI, unlike the U.S. and the European Union.

Vice President Kamala Harris attended the summit, stressing steps the Biden administra­tion has taken to hold tech firms to account. She said Thursday that the United States’ “bold action” should be “inspiring and instructiv­e to other nations.”

United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres urged a coordinate­d global effort, comparing risks from AI to the Nazi threat that Britain’s wartime codebreake­rs worked to combat.

“Bletchley Park played a vital part in the computing breakthrou­ghs that helped to defeat Nazism,” he said “The threat posed by AI is more insidious — but could be just as dangerous.”

The U.N. chief, like many others, warned about the need to act swiftly to keep pace with AI’s advances. General purpose AI chatbots like ChatGPT released over the past year stirred both amazement and fear with their ability to generate text, audio and images that closely resembled human work.

“The speed and reach of today’s AI technology are unpreceden­ted,” Guterres said. “The paradox is that in the future, it will never move as slowly as today. The gap between AI and its governance is wide and growing.”

Sunak hailed the summit as a success, despite its arguably modest achievemen­ts. He managed to get 28 nations — including the U.S. and China — to sign up to working toward “shared agreement and responsibi­lity” about AI risks and to hold further meetings in South Korea and France over the next year.

China did not attend the second day, which focused on meetings among what the U.K. termed a small group of countries “with shared values.” Sunak held a discussion with politician­s from the EU, the U.N., Italy, Germany, France and Australia.

Announcing the expert panel on Thursday, Sunak said pioneering computer scientist Yoshua Bengio, dubbed one of the “godfathers” of AI, had agreed to chair production of its first report on the state of AI science.

Sunak said like-minded government­s and AI companies also had reached a “landmark agreement” to work together on testing the safety of AI models before they’re released to the public. Leading AI companies at the meeting, including OpenAI, Google’s DeepMind, Anthropic and Inflection AI, have agreed to “deepen access” to their frontier AI models, he said.

Binding regulation for AI was not among the summit’s goals. Sunak said the U.K.’s approach should not be to rush into regulation but to fully understand AI first.

Harris emphasized the U.S. administra­tion’s more handson approach in a speech at the U.S. embassy on Wednesday, saying the world needs to act right away to address “the full spectrum” of AI risks, not just existentia­l threats such as massive cyberattac­ks or AI-formulated bioweapons.

She announced a new U.S. AI safety institute to draw up standards for testing AI models for public use. She said it would collaborat­e with a similar U.K. institute announced by Sunak days earlier.

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