Al summit could lead to 'a race to disaster', expert fears
The Guardian|October 21, 2023
One of the executives invited to Rishi Sunak's international AI safety summit next month has warned that the conference risks achieving very little, accusing powerful tech companies of attempting to "capture" the landmark meeting.
Kiran Stacey, Dan Milmo
Al summit could lead to 'a race to disaster', expert fears

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."

This story is from the October 21, 2023 edition of The Guardian.

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This story is from the October 21, 2023 edition of The Guardian.

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