Sunak steps up call for UK to lead on AI regulation
Rishi Sunak said artificial intelligence could transform work and public services but was open to misuses by ‘bad actors’.
Rishi Sunak said artificial intelligence could transform work and public services but was open to misuses by ‘bad actors’.
The Prime Minister is set to tell the London Tech Week that the ‘extraordinary’ possibilities of the emerging technology must be carried out safely.
Party Pieces Holdings, which was founded by the Princess of Wales’s parents in 1987, tumbled into administration last month.
The Government has previously rejected a moratorium saying it is better to build environmental protections for ocean ecosystems.
Both the Foreign Office and Cabinet Office had made submissions containing redactions, the chairwoman was told.
Paul Scully, minster for tech and digital economy, said the benefits of AI should not be overlooked.
Matt Clifford said global regulation was needed to control AI and harness its capability for good purposes.
Sam Altman met Israel’s president Isaac Herzog as part of his ongoing world tour.
The block is in response to a proposed Bill requiring tech giants to pay publishers for linking to or otherwise repurposing their content online.
Professor Sandra Wachter said the risk raised in the letter that AI could wipe out humanity is ‘science fiction fantasy’.
AI could be used to develop new chemical weapons and enhance aerial combat, the San Francisco-based Centre for AI Safety said.
Dozens of experts have put their name to a letter organised by the Centre for AI Safety.
The firm has shed thousands of jobs and has also implemented a policy requiring staff to return to the office three days a week.
President Xi Jinping has called for a meeting of senior officials to tackle what it sees as the threat posed by advances in the field.
Artificial intelligence is impacting nearly every sector of society, said Dr Lynn Parker.