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AI Seoul Summit

23 May 2024

Lead MP

Saqib Bhatti

Debate Type

Ministerial Statement

Tags

EconomyTaxationCulture, Media & SportScience & TechnologyBusiness & Trade
Other Contributors: 14

At a Glance

Saqib Bhatti raised concerns about ai seoul summit in the House of Commons. A government minister responded. Other MPs also contributed.

How the Debate Unfolded

MPs spoke in turn to share their views and ask questions. Here's what each person said:

Government Statement

EconomyTaxationCulture, Media & SportScience & TechnologyBusiness & Trade
Government Statement
The Minister for Science, Research and Innovation announced the outcomes of the AI Seoul summit co-hosted by the UK and South Korea. The event followed the first AI safety summit held at Bletchley Park in November 2023, where 28 countries signed a declaration agreeing to develop trustworthy artificial intelligence. Since then, the UK has launched its AI Safety Institute, which has conducted pre-deployment testing for potential harmful capabilities on advanced AI systems and established an office in San Francisco to broaden technical expertise. The Government also announced high-level partnerships with France, Singapore, and Canada. At Seoul, world leaders agreed to establish a global network of state-backed organisations dedicated to frontier AI safety, sharing information about models' limitations and risks. Sixteen leading companies signed commitments to enhance AI safety and not release new models if risks are too high. Countries also pledged to develop shared risk thresholds for model deployment, addressing severe risks like aiding malicious actors in acquiring weapons or evading human oversight. The statement highlighted the importance of supporting international co-operation on AI science and fostering an environment that nurtures easy access to AI-related resources for SMEs, start-ups, and academia.

Shadow Comment

Chris Bryant
Shadow Comment
The shadow Minister welcomed the economic opportunities of AI but criticised the Government's approach as lacking in regulatory measures. He questioned how shared risk thresholds would be drawn up and their legal force in the UK without legislation. He also raised concerns about companies marking their own homework regarding risks, state actors being 'malicious', integration with cyber-security strategies, and why no creative industries representatives were present at the summit despite its importance to a £127 billion industry. The collapse of the voluntary code of practice working group was highlighted as evidence of the Government's failure to follow through on commitments made six months ago. Bryant called for binding regulation of powerful AI companies requiring them to report before training models over capability thresholds and conduct safety testing, echoing advice from Government advisers.
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