UK government sets out five objectives for AI Safety Summit

UK government sets out five objectives for AI Safety Summit

The UK‌ government has laid out its ⁢five‌ ambitions for ‍the upcoming AI⁢ Safety Summit, due to​ be held at Bletchley Park ⁤at the start of November.

First announced by Prime Minister Rishi Sunak​ in June during a visit to Washington ⁤to meet with US President Joe Biden, the summit aims to ​bring together government ⁤officials,⁢ AI companies,⁣ and⁣ researchers at Bletchley Park to consider the risks and development⁤ of AI technologies and discuss how they⁤ can be mitigated through ⁢internationally coordinated ⁢action.

In ⁤March, the UK government published a white⁣ paper outlining its AI strategy,‍ stating ⁣it was seeking⁤ to ⁢avoid what it called “heavy-handed legislation,” and will instead call on existing ⁢regulatory bodies to use current regulations to ensure⁢ that ⁣AI applications adhere to guidelines, ‌rather than draft new laws.

Regulators are ‌expected ‍to start issuing ​practical guidance to organizations in coming months, handing out risk assessment templates and⁣ setting⁢ out how to implement the government’s principles of safety, ‍security and ⁤robustness; ⁣transparency and explainability; fairness; accountability and governance; and contestability and redress.

“The UK looks forward to working closely with global partners on these issues to make frontier AI safe, ⁣and to ‍ensure nations and citizens globally can realise its benefits, now and in the future,” the Department for Science, ⁢Innovation ⁤and Technology ⁢said in a statement, adding‍ that the five objectives outlined ⁢by the department build upon “initial ⁣stakeholder consultation and evidence-gathering and will frame the discussion ​at the summit.”

The term “frontier AI” is defined in a July 2023 academic paper by Anderljung et ⁣al as “highly capable foundation ⁣models that could ⁤exhibit dangerous ⁢capabilities.”‍ Foundation​ models are a kind of generative ⁣AI, and the dangers that the next generation of ⁤such models might pose include “significant physical harm or the disruption of key ‌societal functions on a global scale, resulting from intentional misuse or accident,” the paper’s authors​ warned.

The five objectives of the UK government’s summit are:

Develop a shared understanding of⁤ the risks posed by frontier AI and the need for action

Put forward process ⁤for international collaboration on frontier AI safety, including how best to support national and international frameworks

Propose appropriate measures which​ individual organisations should take to increase frontier AI safety

Identify areas for potential collaboration ​on AI safety research, ⁣including evaluating model capabilities and the development of new standards to​ support governance

Showcase how ensuring the safe development of AI will enable AI to be ​used for good globally.

The full list of invitees has yet to be announced.

2023-09-04 16:00:03
Link from www.computerworld.com rnrn

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