AI Safety
Innovation in AI, particularly Generative AI, is developing rapidly, with daily news stories highlighting the opportunities and risks. Ensuring AI safety is now a priority for government, civil society, and industry alike.
techUK's AI Safety program focuses on supporting members to navigate the AI safety landscape as international agreements and initiatives are operationalised. A key program priority is understanding the ambitions and progress of the UK's AISI and the wider AI safety discourse, particularly the role of standards. The program facilitates industry engagement and collaboration with UK stakeholders including the AISI. It also ensures the voice of UK industry on AI safety is included in this increasingly global conversation, such as at the G7 and future AI Safety Summits.
Resources for members
We will continue to update this page with further articles, use cases and other relevant content to help inform and build on the AI Safety, AI Inclusion and AI Innovation discourse. If you’d like to contribute, please get in touch with [email protected].
1 - AI Safety Insights on the AI Safety Institute and wider discourse
The AI Safety Institute’s Ambitions and Progress Reports
How the AI Safety Institute is Approaching Evaluations
Fourth Progress Report Towards Ambitions of AI Safety Institute
Third Progress Report Towards Ambitions of AI Safety Institute
Second Progress Report Towards Ambitions of AI Safety Institute
First Progress Report Towards Ambitions of AI Safety Institute
Reflecting on the AI Seoul Summit
On 21-22 May 2024, six months after the historic Bletchley Summit hosted by the UK, the international community convened virtually and in South Korea for the AI Seoul Summit to build on the momentum and further global cooperation on AI Safety, Innovation and Inclusion. The two-day summit brought together leaders from governments, industry, civil society, and academia to discuss the responsible development and deployment of frontier AI.
Ahead of the AI Seoul Summit, on 14 May 2024 techUK welcomed Secretary of State for Science, Innovation and Technology Michelle Donelan MP at an industry event focused on bringing different voices to discuss their expectations and hopes for the upcoming AI Seoul Summit.
With over 50 senior representatives from businesses across the techUK membership, the event served as a platform for direct engagement with the UK Government, setting the stage for the forthcoming global summit set to take place in Seoul on May 21-22.
The AI Seoul Summit reaffirmed the international community's commitment to shaping the trajectory of AI development through global cooperation and shared guidelines, setting the stage for continued dialogue and concerted action in the months ahead on the road to the France Summit. This insight outlines the key outcomes of the AI Seoul Summit.
These use cases are categorised by the themes of the AI Seoul Summit, namely AI safety, innovation and inclusivity.
Reflecting on the Bletchley AI Safety Summit
The first global AI Safety Summit in the UK in 2023 facilitated consensus on approaching frontier AI technologies and established a new track in global AI discussions. The Summit took place on the 1-2 November in Bletchley Park with five key objectives, including developing a shared understanding of the risks posed by frontier AI, agreeing areas for potential collaboration on AI safety research and showcasing how the safe development of AI can enable AI to be used for good globally. It emphasised governments and industry collaborating to understand and mitigate risks of emerging AI while seizing opportunities.
The techUK perspective
techUK CEO Julian David attended the AI Safety Summit. He has provided his perspectives and reflections on the event in a one-on-one conversation with our Head of Data Analytics, AI, and Digital ID, Katherine Holden:
Discussions
A responsible approach to seizing the opportunities of AI was the thread that ran through the Summit with world leaders focusing in on how to enable humanity to seize the seismic opportunities of artificial intelligence by first seeking to understand and mitigate the potential risks of powerful emerging frontier AI technologies.
This approach was also clear in the Summit’s outcomes and Prime Minister Rishi Sunak will be pleased to have secured broad international agreement, including the US, China and EU all sharing a stage together as well as commitments from the leading developers of frontier AI technologies.
Outcomes of the Bletchley AI Safety Summit
Outcomes
So what were the key outcomes of the inaugural Global AI Safety Summit:
-
The Bletchley Declaration: signed by 28 countries, including the USA, China and European Union the Bletchley Declaration recognises that if the opportunities of AI are to be seized there must be an international effort to research, understand and mitigate the risks posed by frontier AI technologies.
-
More AI Safety Summits: the Bletchley Declaration confirmed additional meetings in 2024 with South Korea to host a mini virtual summit in six months while France will host the next full in person AI Safety Summit 12 months from now.
-
AI Safety Institute: The UK announced that it will put its Frontier Models Taskforce on a permanent footing in the form of a New AI Safety Institute creating a UK based but internationally facing resource with the purpose of evaluating frontier systems, advancing research on AI Safety and sharing information between a global network of Government’s, private companies and civil society organisations. The Institute was announced alongside endorsements from the US, Singaporean, German, Canadian and Japanese Governments as well as from major frontier AI labs.
-
Senior government representatives from leading AI nations, and major AI organisations, agreed to a plan for safety testing of frontier AI models: The plan involves testing models both pre- and post-deployment, and a role for governments in testing, particularly for critical national security, safety and society harms.
-
The UK unites with global partners to accelerate development in world’s poorest countries using AI: UK and partners to fund safe and responsible AI projects for development around the world, beginning in Africa, with £80 million collaboration.
-
Investment in the ‘AI Research Resource’ for the AI Safety Institute: The investment into the AI Research Resource has been tripled to £300 million, up from £100 million (announced in March 2023), in a bid to further boost UK AI capabilities. The investment will connect Isambard-AI (based at Bristol University) to a newly announced Cambridge supercomputer called ‘Dawn’. Connecting these two supercomputers will give researchers access to resources with more than 30-times the capacity of the UK’s current largest public AI computing tools.
Overall, both Rishi Sunak and Michelle Donelan, the Science and Technology Secretary, who led the first day of the summit, will be happy with what the UK has achieved. Securing a consensus on a process for approaching frontier AI technologies and establishing a new track in global AI discussions.
However, as always, the proof will be in how these initial agreements and forums develop in the years ahead and if they can lead to tangible progress between countries who often have differing views.
Get our tech and innovation insights straight to your inbox
Sign-up to get the latest updates and opportunities from our Technology and Innovation and AI programmes.
Katherine Holden
Katherine joined techUK in May 2018 and currently leads the Data Analytics, AI and Digital ID programme.
Tess Buckley
Tess is the Programme Manager for Digital Ethics and AI Safety at techUK.
Sue Daley
Sue leads techUK's Technology and Innovation work.