M.P. CORRESPONDENT
/ MUMBAI
The UK and US have signed a
landmark deal to work together on testing advanced artificial intelligence
(AI).
The agreement signed on Monday says both countries will
work together on developing "robust" methods for evaluating the
safety of AI tools and the systems that underpin them.
It is the first bilateral agreement of its kind.
UK tech minister Michelle Donelan said it is "the
defining technology challenge of our generation".
"We have always been clear that ensuring the safe
development of AI is a shared global issue," she said.
"Only by working together can we address the
technology's risks head on and harness its enormous potential to help us all
live easier and healthier lives."
The secretary of state for science, innovation and
technology added that the agreement builds upon commitments made at the AI
Safety Summit held in Bletchley Park in November 2023.
The
event, attended by AI bosses including OpenAI's Sam Altman, Google DeepMind's
Demis Hassabis and tech billionaire Elon Musk, saw both the UK and US create AI
Safety Institutes which aim to evaluate open and closed-source AI systems.
AI concerns
Currently, the majority of AI systems are only capable
of performing single, intelligent tasks that would usually be completed by a
human.
Known as "narrow" AI, these tasks can range
from quickly analysing data or providing a desired response to a prompt.
But there are fears that more intelligent
"general" AI tools - capable of completing a range of tasks usually
performed by humans - could endanger humanity.
"AI, like chemical science, nuclear science, and
biological science, can be weaponised and used for good or ill," Prof Sir
Nigel Shadbolt told the BBC's Today programme.
But the University of Oxford professor said fears around
AI's existential risk "are sometimes a bit overblown".
"We've
got to be really supportive and appreciative of efforts to get great AI powers
thinking about and researching what the dangers are," he said.
"We need to understand just how susceptible these
models are, and also how powerful they are."
Gina Raimondo, the US commerce secretary, said the
agreement will give the governments a better understanding of AI systems, which
will allow them to give better guidance.
"It will accelerate both of our Institutes' work across
the full spectrum of risks, whether to our national security or to our broader
society," she said.
"Our partnership makes clear that we aren't running
away from these concerns - we're running at them."
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