The AI summit in Seoul, which is being co-hosted with Britain,
discussed concerns such as job security, copyright and
inequality on Wednesday, after 16 tech companies signed a
voluntary agreement to develop AI safely a day earlier.
A separate pledge was signed on Wednesday by 14 companies
including Alphabet's Google, Microsoft, OpenAI and six Korean
companies to use methods such as watermarking to help identify
AI-generated content, as well as ensure job creation and help
for socially vulnerable groups.
"Cooperation is not an option, it is a necessity," Lee Jong-Ho,
South Korea's Minister of Science and ICT (information and
communication technologies), said in an interview with Reuters.
"The Seoul summit has further shaped AI safety talks and added
discussions about innovation and inclusivity," Lee said, adding
he expects discussions at the next summit to include more
collaboration on AI safety institutes.
The first global AI summit was held in Britain in November, and
the next in-person gathering is due to take place in France,
likely in 2025.
Ministers and officials from multiple countries discussed on
Wednesday cooperation between state-backed AI safety institutes
to help regulate the technology.
AI experts welcomed the steps made so far to start regulating
the technology, though some said rules needed to be enforced.
"We need to move past voluntary... the people affected should be
setting the rules via governments," said Francine Bennett,
Director at the AI-focused Ada Lovelace Institute.
AI services should be proven to meet obligatory safety standards
before hitting the market, so companies equate safety with
profit and stave off any potential public backlash from
unexpected harm, said Max Tegmark, President of Future of Life
Institute, an organisation vocal about AI systems' risks.
South Korean science minister Lee said that laws tended to lag
behind the speed of advancement in technologies like AI.
"But for safe use by the public, there needs to be flexible laws
and regulations in place."
(Reporting by Joyce Lee; Editing by Ed Davies)
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