The UK’s AI safety summit, which runs for two days, is being attended by more than 100 figures from politics and business, including the likes of OpenAI’s Sam Altman, Google DeepMind’s Demis Hassabis, and Elon Musk.
The US and China have endorsed a joint declaration on the need to manage the potentially “catastrophic” risks posed by Artificial Intelligence.
The world’s leading AI powers were among 28 nations to agree to the UK’s Bletchley Declaration, which stresses the need for countries to work together on the powerful technology.
It was published on the first day of a world-first AI safety summit, organised by Rishi Sunak, which kicked off with a video message from the King.
The deal gets its name from host site Bletchley Park, which was home to Britain’s Second World War codebreakers.
The government says the agreement fulfils key objectives of the safety summit, ensuring potential AI threats are managed “collectively” and the tech is “developed and deployed in a safe, responsible way”.