Geopolitics of artificial intelligence will focus on the major French summits and will cut off a pledge that will guide world leaders, executives and experts to develop rapidly advancing technologies.
This is the latest in a series of global dialogues on AI governance, but comes at a fresh inflection point as China’s bustling, budget-friendly Deepseek chatbots shake up the industry.
US Vice President JD Vance is traveling abroad for the first time since taking office, but has attended the Paris AI Action Summit since February 10th, and Chinese President Xi Jinping has sent a special envoy, and has been working hard to meet. Indicates the interest.
The provincial chiefs and government officials, high-tech bosses and researchers are gathering in Paris for a two-day summit co-hosted by French President Emmanuel Macron and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
The event aims to address ways to leverage the possibilities of artificial intelligence while reducing the myriad risks of technology.
European Commission Chairman Ursula von der Leyen includes 80 people including German Prime Minister Olaf Scholz, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Open CEO Sam Altman, Microsoft President Brad Smith and Google CEO Sundar Pichai. He is present with staff from the country and CEOs.
Tesla CEO Elon Musk, who attended the first 2023 summit at former UK Code Break Base Bletchley Park, and Deepshek founder Lian Wenfeng are invited, but whether either of them will attend is unknown.
More than two years after ChatGpt’s debut, Generative AI continues to make incredible progress with Breakneck Speed. Technology that powers all-purpose chatbots is changing many aspects of life with the ability to spit high-quality text, images, or videos and perform complex tasks.
The 2023 summit in the UK brought non-binding pledges by 28 countries to tackle AI risks. Last year, a follow-up conference hosted by South Korea secured another pledge to establish a network of public safety agencies to advance research and testing.
AI safety is still on the Paris agenda, with a group of experts reporting the potential extreme dangers of general-purpose AI.
However, this time, organizers are expanding the discussion to more countries and expanding it to a variety of other AI-related topics. Like the previous editions, this summit creates no binding regulations.
“The summit comes when many people are trying to position themselves in international competition,” Macron told reporters. “It’s about establishing the rules of the game. AI can’t become Wild West.”
According to Macron’s office, organizers are working to appoint the nation to sign the collective commitment of a joint political declaration to more ethical, democratically and environmentally sustainable AI. However, it is unclear whether the US will agree to such measures.
Another major goal is to secure an agreement on AI’s public interest partnerships. Paris is looking to raise 2.5 billion euros (US$2.6 billion) for public-private partnerships.