G-20 broadens debate on AI risks and mulls global oversight


G-20 host, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, said the group should create a framework for 'human-centric' AI governance while European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen suggested a similar oversight body to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. — AFP

Leaders at the Group of 20 summit discussed how to harness artificial intelligence for economic development while protecting human rights, with some calling for global oversight of the rapidly evolving technology.

G-20 host, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, said the group should create a framework for "human-centric” AI governance while European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen suggested a similar oversight body to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

"It is telling that even the makers and inventors of AI are calling on political leaders to regulate,” she said at a G-20 session in New Delhi Sunday (Sept 10).

Her comments were echoed by German Finance Minister Christian Lindner who said the bloc would address the ethics of AI in common rules. "This is a process that is starting now, also at the level of experts, and is to be deepened next year,” he said on the summit’s sidelines.

In their final communique, G-20 leaders said they would work to ensure "responsible AI development, deployment and use,” that would protect rights, transparency, privacy and data protection and avoid other issues. They also agreed to pursue a "pro-innovation regulatory/governance approach” that maximizes the benefits of AI but takes into account the risks associated with it.

G-7 leaders agree to set ip ‘Hiroshima Process’ to govern AI

The statement follows agreement on the need for governance by the leaders of the Group of Seven advanced economies, who in May expressed concern about the risk of the technologies. Meeting in Japan, they launched a "Hiroshima Process” to hold cabinet-level discussions on the issue and present the results by the end of the year.

AI is also expected to be a core issue for Italy’s G-7 presidency in 2024. Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and Modi discussed coordination at this weekend’s G-20, according to her office.

The UK will host the first global summit on Artificial Intelligence on Nov 1-2. Sunak is trying to position Britain at the vanguard of the technology, which has the potential to do good – such as speeding up medical diagnoses and cutting transport emissions – but also risks being deployed for nefarious purposes such as rigging elections and spreading false information.

Sunak to host AI Summit Nov 1-2 at UK Code-Breaking venue

US President Joe Biden and other G-7 leaders, along with tech chiefs including OpenAI chief Sam Altman, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella, Anthropic’s Dario Amodei and DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis, are expected to be invited to the UK summit, Bloomberg has previously reported. – Bloomberg

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!
   

Next In Tech News

‘Harvesting data’: Latin American AI startups transform farming
Tech giants agree to child safety principles around generative AI
What next for TikTok as US ban moves a step closer?
Translation platform DeepL launches AI assistant for crafting texts
Preview: ‘Dune: Awakening’ takes fans to Arrakis and forces them to survive a wasteland
Young Europeans are spending money in the metaverse
This exoskeleton can boost your physical capabilities
This AI-focused chip is powered by light
Study warns users about health information on TikTok
Apple renews talks with OpenAI for iPhone generative AI features, Bloomberg News reports

Others Also Read