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Rishi Sunak reveals ‘landmark agreement’ with AI firms to test safety of models before release | Science & Tech News

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Rishi Sunak has said the UK’s AI safety summit will “tip the balance in favour of humanity” after tech companies agreed to work with governments to test the safety of their models before their release.

The prime minister said while the landmark event at Bletchley Park was “only the beginning of the conversation”, it showed there was the “political will and capability to control the technology”.

Mr Sunak revealed governments and AI companies in attendance had reached a “landmark agreement” to work together on testing the safety of AI models before they are released to the public.

“This is a new step that was necessary,” he told Sky’s science and technology editor Tom Clarke.

The UK and US governments will both establish their own AI safety institutes to carry out such testing, and work together to share their findings.

Mr Sunak was speaking at a news briefing to close the event at Bletchley Park in Milton Keynes, home of Britain’s Second World War codebreakers.

It brought together politicians, tech bosses, and academics to discuss the challenges posed by artificial intelligence.

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It resulted in the Bletchley Declaration, which saw 28 nations including the US and China agree to collaborate to research safety concerns around the world’s most capable AI models.

Britain's Prime Minister Rishi Sunak welcomes U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris at the AI Safety Summit in Bletchley Park, near Milton Keynes, Britain, November 2, 2023. REUTERS/Toby Melville/Pool
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US vice president Kamala Harris and (below) the Italian PM Giorgia Meloni were among the politicians at the summit

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak meets with Italy's Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni during the AI safety summit, the first global summit on the safe use of artificial intelligence, at Bletchley Park in Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire. Picture date: Thursday November 2, 2023.

Mr Sunak said while the technology had the potential to “transform our lives”, impacting sectors from education to health care, it could present dangers “on a scale like pandemics and nuclear war”.

The Bletchley Declaration says any threats are “best addressed through international cooperation”, and also set out plans for more global summits next year.

But there was little sign of a concrete approach to regulation or any suggestions of a pause in AI’s development, which experts including Elon Musk called for earlier this year.

It also did little to satisfy critics who warned Mr Sunak ahead of the summit he was too focused on hypothetical future threats, rather than present dangers like job losses and misinformation.

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What is the AI Safety Summit?

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Following the summit, the prime minister will host billionaire Musk for talks in Downing Street.

It will be livestreamed on the SpaceX and Tesla owner’s X platform.

Musk, who told Sky News AI is a “risk” to humanity, was one of the most high-profile tech bosses at the summit.

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Elon Musk: ‘AI is a risk’

OpenAI boss Sam Altman, whose company is behind the ChatGPT chatbot, was also present.

Asked by Sky News whether he would agree to provide open access to his firm’s AI models, he said: “We do.”

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OpenAI CEO Sam Altman at summit

Mr Sunak has previously announced leading AI companies had agreed to share their models with the UK, with a government safety institute launched to research them and flag any concerns.

The White House detailed similar plans this week as part of a wide set of safeguards which include AI-generated content having to be watermarked to combat deepfake content.

US vice president Kamala Harris, who attended the UK summit on Thursday, has said “everyday threats” can’t be ignored despite fears around the more far-flung dangers.

Mr Sunak has been more cautious than the US about AI safety legislation, arguing it would risk stifling innovation.

Instead, the government has tasked existing regulators like the Competition and Markets Authority, Ofcom, and the Health and Safety Executive to apply key principles around safety, transparency, and accountability to AI.



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