China Initiates Global AI Governance Initiative Following US Imposition of New Restrictions on Chip Exports

China Initiates Global AI Governance Initiative Following US Imposition of New Restrictions on Chip Exports

China’s Xi ⁢Jinping announced a global AI governance initiative during the 3rd Belt‍ and Road Forum in Beijing.
Reuters

KEY POINTS

Xi announced the initiative during the Belt and Road Forum on Wednesday
China’s foreign ministry said⁣ countries should oppose groups that “obstruct” the ‌AI development of other nations
The U.S. and Singapore recently synced up their‍ AI governance frameworks

China⁤ has launched a global AI (artificial‌ intelligence) governance initiative, calling for “equal rights” in the development​ of the fast-evolving technology.

Chinese President‍ Xi Jinping launched the initiative⁤ Wednesday on ‌the sidelines of the third​ Belt and Road Forum (BRF) ‌in Beijing.

The⁣ announcement came a day after the U.S. announced fresh curbs on the export of ‍more advanced AI chips to China. The U.S. Commerce Department on⁤ Tuesday⁢ announced new rules that would restrict China’s access to advanced semiconductor equipment like Nvidia’s A800 and ⁤H800⁣ chips.

“It is part of China’s active ‍effort ⁤to advance the ⁤vision of a community ⁣with‍ a shared future for mankind,” a Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson said in a statement Wednesday.

According to the ministry, ⁢the core components ‌of​ the Global AI Governance Initiative include a people-centric approach to AI development, upholding “mutual respect, equality and mutual benefit,” promoting a testing and assessment system based on AI risk levels and supporting discussions within the United Nations Framework to establish “an international institution” to govern the technology.

It also called on countries to “oppose drawing ideological lines or forming exclusive groups​ to obstruct other countries from developing AI.”

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Last week,⁣ the U.S. and​ Singapore synced‌ up their respective AI frameworks during the inaugural⁤ U.S.-Singapore Dialogue⁣ on Critical⁣ and‌ Emerging Technologies (CET ​Dialogue), ⁤marking the first “successful country-to-country mapping by both countries.”

“Singapore and the United States have‌ made their AI governance frameworks interoperable,” Singapore’s‌ Ministry of Communications⁣ and Information said in a press release last ⁣week.

The two⁤ countries ⁣completed a joint mapping exercise, called a crosswalk, of​ the U.S. National ⁢Institute⁤ of Standards‍ and Technology’s (NIST) ‌AI Risk Management Framework and ​Singapore Infocomm‍ Media Development Authority’s⁤ (IMDA) AI Verify. Apart from the syncing exercise, they also announced a plan to⁣ “launch an AI Governance Group to advance shared principles” and improve information exchanges​ for safer ⁣and more responsible AI innovation.

The latest initiatives from three of the world’s technologically advanced countries in AI governance show the ⁤race to lead the technology is heating up.

In June, British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak ⁣said he wants to “make the U.K. not just the intellectual home but the geographical⁢ home, of global AI safety regulation.”

Tech companies working on AI have also formed a group, called Frontier Model‍ Forum, to address the risks the technology can pose ⁣to‍ society. AI⁢ startup Anthropic, ChatGPT maker OpenAI and tech giants Microsoft and Google ‍are part of the group.

It appears China has been trying​ to balance regulation and promote innovation in⁢ AI. The Cyberspace Administration of China⁣ (CAC) released interim rules for managing generative AI in July. The agency said the measures⁤ “propose that the state adheres to the principle of attaching equal importance ⁢to‌ development and security” in managing generative AI products and services.

Artificial intelligence

2023-11-05 06:41:02
Link from www.ibtimes.com

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