...

Logo Pasino du Havre - Casino-Hôtel - Spa
in partnership with
Logo Nextory

AI experts and officials gather to discuss safety amid Trump administration uncertainty

Business • Nov 22, 2024, 1:43 PM
4 min de lecture
1

Government scientists and artificial intelligence (AI) experts are meeting in the US this week as questions about the industry's future loom ahead of President-elect Donald Trump's second term in the White House.

Officials from the US and its allies are hoping to talk about how to better detect and combat a flood of AI-generated deepfakes fueling fraud, harmful impersonation and sexual abuse.

“We have a choice,” said US Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo to the crowd of attendees on Wednesday. “We are the ones developing this technology. You are the ones developing this technology. We can decide what it looks like".

The meeting was the first of the International Network of AI Safety Institutes, which was announced during the AI summit in Seoul in May.

The lingering uncertainty comes from Trump's camp, who promised to “repeal Joe Biden’s dangerous Executive Order that hinders AI Innovation, and imposes Radical Leftwing ideas on the development of this technology".

Biden signed a sweeping AI executive order last year and this year formed the new AI Safety Institute at the National Institute for Standards and Technology, which is part of the Commerce Department.

But Trump hasn’t made clear what about the order he dislikes or what he’d do about the AI Safety Institute. Trump’s transition team didn’t respond to emails this week seeking comment.

Trump didn’t spend much time talking about AI during his four years as president, though in 2019 he became the first to sign an executive order about AI. It directed federal agencies to prioritise research and development in the field.

'Safety is good for innovation'

Addressing concerns about slowing down innovation, Raimondo said she wanted to make it clear that the US AI Safety Institute is not a regulator and also “not in the business of stifling innovation".

“But here’s the thing. Safety is good for innovation. Safety breeds trust. Trust speeds adoption. Adoption leads to more innovation,” she said.

Some experts expect the kind of technical work happening at an old military officers’ club at San Francisco’s Presidio National Park this week to proceed regardless of who’s in charge.

“There’s no reason to believe that we’ll be doing a 180 when it comes to the work of the AI Safety Institute,” said Heather West, a senior fellow at the Center for European Policy Analysis. Behind the rhetoric, she said there’s already been overlap.

Raimondo and other officials sought to press home the idea that AI safety is not a partisan issue.

“And by the way, this room is bigger than politics. Politics is on everybody’s mind. I don’t want to talk about politics. I don’t care what political party you’re in, this is not in Republican interest or Democratic interest,” she said.

“It’s frankly in no one’s interest anywhere in the world, in any political party, for AI to be dangerous, or for AI to in get the hands of malicious non-state actors that want to cause destruction and sow chaos.”


Today

German auto technology supplier Bosch to cut thousands of jobs
Business • 3:28 PM
2 min
German auto technology supplier Bosch to cut thousands of jobs, citing stagnant demand for cars and new technology.
Read the article
ExxonMobil, Eni and Total eye natural gas deposit plan off Cyprus
Business • 1:54 PM
2 min
ExxonMobil could partner up with Eni and Total to jointly develop natural gas deposits off Cyprus.
Read the article
AI experts and officials gather to discuss safety amid Trump administration uncertainty
Business • 1:43 PM
4 min
Experts in artificial intelligence (AI) are gathering in San Francisco to talk about how to keep models safe, but uncertainty from the incoming Trump administration overshadows their work.
Read the article
Endometriosis history linked to a slightly higher chance of death before 70 - study
Business • 11:34 AM
3 min
Endometriosis and fibroids were both linked to an increased risk of early death from gynaecological cancers.
Read the article
'Not our job to please Elon Musk': Australia rejects claims it wants to restrict Internet access
Business • 11:18 AM
2 min
"Our job is to put in place the necessary protection for kids online," Australia's treasurer said after the billionaire criticised its new social media age limit bill.
Read the article
Northvolt files for bankruptcy in major blow to European EV sector
Business • 11:11 AM
3 min
The Swedish battery developer and manufacturer, Northvolt, has filed for bankruptcy in the US, as the company struggles with mounting debt, after it was unable to secure rescue funding and was left with only one week of cash reserves.
Read the article
Governments ask EU Commission to beef up cybersecurity agency Enisa
Business • 10:49 AM
2 min
The extra financial and human resources would come as the Cybersecurity Act is up for a review.
Read the article
Eurozone business activity contracts: Euro tumbles to 2-year lows
Business • 10:12 AM
4 min
Eurozone business activity fell sharply in November, with services joining manufacturing in contraction. The Composite PMI hit 48.1, signalling the steepest decline since January. The euro and bond yields weakened, while equities turned red, with banks wi
Read the article
Senior Chinese official warns that any future US tariff hikes will backfire
Business • 10:02 AM
2 min
Higher tariffs on Chinese exports will backfire - and China can manage the impact of such "external shocks", a senior Commerce Ministry official said on Friday in Beijing.
Read the article
US intelligence warns defence companies of Russian sabotage threat
Business • 9:42 AM
2 min
US intelligence officials warned American defence companies on Thursday to increase security precautions following several acts of sabotage in Europe that officials have blamed on Russia.
Read the article
Mercedes reveals plans to cut costs by several billion euros per year
Business • 9:04 AM
3 min
Mercedes has revealed plans for substantial cost cuts of several billion euros in the coming years. However, specific details on how these costs will be reduced and which locations will be affected has not yet been detailed.
Read the article
Weekly recap: Geopolitical tensions weigh on European market sentiment
Business • 7:58 AM
5 min
The European stock markets rebounded on Thursday but remained in negative territory for the week as rising geopolitical tensions weighed on sentiment.
Read the article
Will Trump steal the EU’s crypto crown?
Business • 7:00 AM
4 min
Some hope a long-awaited new EU law will help the bloc attract innovative digital businesses — but it may have trouble competing with a new pro-crypto administration in the US.
Read the article