Connor Leahy, the chief executive of the AI safety research company Conjecture, said he believed heads of government were poised to agree a style of regulation that would allow companies to continue developing "god-like" AI almost unchecked.
Leahy is one of just 100 people- including foreign government ministers, tech executives and civil society figures who have been invited to November's summit at Bletchley Park, which Downing Street is hoping will mark a turning point in how advanced AI technology is developed.
Officials have published an agenda for the summit that talks about the importance of "responsible capability scaling" - the idea that companies should develop their cutting-edge models according to a set of guidelines.
However Leahy and others believe that there should be a complete moratorium on developing artificial general intelligence - AI models that can accomplish tasks at a human or beyond-human level of intelligence.
Leahy said: "The aim of responsible scaling is to provide a framework which looks like something was done so that politicians can go home and say: 'We have done something?' But the actual policy is nothing."
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der October 21, 2023-Ausgabe von The Guardian.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der October 21, 2023-Ausgabe von The Guardian.
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