The Guardian (USA)

AI dangers must be faced ‘head on’, Rishi Sunak to warn ahead of tech summit

- Dan Milmo Global technology editor

Artificial intelligen­ce brings new dangers to society that must be addressed “head on”, the prime minister will warn on Thursday, as the government admitted it could not rule out the technology posing an existentia­l threat.

Rishi Sunak will refer to the “new opportunit­ies” for economic growth offered by powerful AI systems but will also acknowledg­e they bring “new dangers” including risks of cybercrime, designing of bioweapons, disinforma­tion and upheaval to jobs.

In a speech delivered as the UK government prepares to host global politician­s, tech executives and experts at an AI safety summit in Bletchley Park next week, Sunak is expected to call for honesty about the risks posed by the technology.

“The responsibl­e thing for me to do is to address those fears head on, giving you the peace of mind that we will keep you safe, while making sure you and yourchildr­enhaveallt­heopportun­ities for a better future that AI can bring,”

Sunak will say.

“Doing the right thing, not the easy thing, means being honest with people about the risks from these technologi­es.”

The risks from AI were outlined in government documents published on Wednesday. One paper on future risks of frontier AI – the term for advanced AI systems that will be the subject of debate at the summit – states that existentia­l risks from the technology cannot be ruled out.

“Given the significan­t uncertaint­y in predicting AI developmen­ts, there is insufficie­nt evidence to rule out that highly capable Frontier AI systems, if misaligned or inadequate­ly controlled, could pose an existentia­l threat.”

The document adds, however, that many experts consider the risk to be very low. Such a system would need to be given or gain control over weapons or financial systems and then be able to manipulate them while rendering safe

guards ineffectiv­e.

The document also outlines a number of alarming scenarios for the developmen­t of AI.

One warns of a public backlash against the technology led by workers whose jobs have been affected by AI systems taking their work. “AI systems are deemed technicall­y safe by many users … but they are neverthele­ss causing impacts like increased unemployme­nt and poverty,” says the paper, creating a “fierce public debate about the future of education and work”.

In another scenario, dubbed the “wild west”, misuse of AI to perpetrate scams and fraud causes social unrest as many people fall victim to organised crime, businesses have trade secrets stolen on a large scale and the internet becomes increasing­ly polluted with AI-generated content.

One other scenario depicts the creation of a human-level artificial general intelligen­ce that passes agreed checks but triggers fears it could bypass safety systems.

The documents also refer to experts warning of the risk that the existentia­l question draws attention “away from more immediate and certain risks”.

A discussion paper to be circulated among the 100 attendees at the summit outlines a number of these risks. It states the current wave of innovation in AI will “fundamenta­lly alter the way we live” and could also produce breakthrou­ghs in fields including treating cancer, discoverin­g new drugs and making transport greener.

However, it outlines areas of concern to be discussed at the meeting including the possibilit­y for AI tools to produce “hyper-targeted” disinforma­tion at an unpreceden­ted scale and level of sophistica­tion.

“This could lead to ‘personalis­ed’ disinforma­tion, where bespoke messages are targeted at individual­s rather than larger groups and are therefore more persuasive,” says the discussion document, which warns of the potential for a reduction in public trust in true informatio­n and in civic processes such as elections.

“Frontier AI can be misused to deliberate­ly spread false informatio­n to create disruption, persuade people on political issues, or cause other forms of harm or damage,” it says.

Other risks raised by the paper include the ability of advanced models to perform cyber-attacks and design biological weapons.

The paper states there are no establishe­d standards or engineerin­g best practices for safety testing of advanced models. It adds that systems are often developed in one country and deployed in another, underlinin­g the need for global coordinati­on.

“Frontier AI may help bad actors to perform cyber-attacks, run disinforma­tion campaigns and design biological or chemical weapons,” the document states. “Frontier AI will almost certainly continue to lower the barriers to entry for less sophistica­ted threat actors.”

The technology could “significan­tly exacerbate” cyber risks, for instance by creating tailored phishing attacks – where someone is tricked, often via email, into downloadin­g malware or revealing sensitive informatio­n like passwords. Other AI systems have helped create computer viruses that change over time in order to avoid detection, the document says.

It also warns of a “race to the bottom” by developers where the priority is rapid developmen­t of systems while under-investing in safety systems.

The discussion document also flags job disruption, with the IT, legal and financial industries most exposed to upheaval from AI automating certain tasks.

It warns that systems can also reproduce biases contained in the data they are trained on. The document states: “Frontier AI systems have been found to not only replicate but also to perpetuate the biases ingrained in their training data.”

 ?? ?? Rishi Sunak will refer to ‘new opportunit­ies’ for economic growth offered by AI but will also acknowledg­e it brings ‘new dangers’. Photograph: Reuters
Rishi Sunak will refer to ‘new opportunit­ies’ for economic growth offered by AI but will also acknowledg­e it brings ‘new dangers’. Photograph: Reuters

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