The UK's AI safety institute is set to open an office in the US this summer, aiming to enhance international collaboration on AI regulation. The new office in San Francisco will recruit technical staff to support the institute's efforts in London and strengthen connections with its US counterparts. The new office opening underscores the need for coordinated global efforts to manage AI's rapid advancements and potential risks. Experts have highlighted the existential threats AI could pose, comparable to nuclear weapons or climate change, making international regulation crucial.
This announcement comes just before Seoul's second global AI safety summit, co-hosted by the British and South Korean governments. The summit will bring together leaders to discuss AI safety, innovation, and inclusion.
The initiative follows significant concerns raised after OpenAI released ChatGPT in November 2022, prompting calls for a development pause due to unpredictable threats. The first AI safety summit at Britain's Bletchley Park saw world leaders and tech executives, including US Vice President Kamala Harris and OpenAI's Sam Altman, discuss regulatory approaches.
The summit fostered cooperation despite global tensions, with China signing the 'Bletchley Declaration' alongside the US and others. Britain's technology minister, Michele Donelan, emphasised the importance of international standards on AI safety, which will be a key topic at the upcoming Seoul summit.