UK goes light-touch on AI as Elon Musk sounds the
alarm
Experts fear UK policymakers have not grasped the
scale of the challenge the technology poses.
BY
ANNABELLE DICKSON
MARCH 29,
2023 5:41 PM CET
https://www.politico.eu/article/uk-go-light-touch-ai-artificial-intelligence-elon-musk-alarm/
LONDON — As
Elon Musk urged humanity to get a grip on artificial intelligence, in London
ministers were hailing its benefits.
Rishi
Sunak’s new technology chief Michelle Donelan on Wednesday unveiled the
government’s long-awaited blueprint for regulating AI, insisting a heavy-handed
approach is off the agenda.
At the
heart of the innovation-friendly pitch is a plan to give existing regulators a
year to issue “practical guidance” for the safe use of machine learning in
their sectors based on broad principles like safety, transparency, fairness and
accountability. But no new legislation or regulatory bodies are being planned
for the burgeoning technology.
It stands
in contrast to the strategy being pursued in Brussels, where lawmakers are
pushing through a more detailed rulebook, backed by a new liability regime.
Donelan
insists her “common-sense, outcomes-oriented approach” will allow the U.K. to
“be the best place in the world to build, test and use AI technology.”
Her
department’s Twitter account was flooded with content promoting the benefits of
AI. “Think AI is scary? It doesn't have to be!” one of its posts stated on
Wednesday.
But some
experts fear U.K. policymakers, like their counterparts around the world, may
not have grasped the scale of the challenge, and believe more urgency is needed
in understanding and policing how the fast-developing tech is used.
“The
government’s timeline of a year or more for implementation will leave risks
unaddressed just as AI systems are being integrated at pace into our daily
lives, from search engines to office suite software,” Michael Birtwistle,
associate director of data and AI law and policy at the Ada Lovelace Institute,
said. It has “significant gaps," which could leave harms “unaddressed,” he
warned.
“We
shouldn’t be risking inventing a nuclear blast before we’ve learnt how to keep
it in the shell,” Connor Axiotes, a researcher at the free-market Adam Smith
Institute think tank, warned.
Elon wades
in
Hours
before the U.K. white paper went live, across the Atlantic an open letter
calling for labs to immediately pause work training AI systems to be even more
powerful for at least six months went live. It was signed by artificial
intelligence experts and industry executives, including Tesla and Twitter boss
Elon Musk. Researchers at Alphabet-owned DeepMind, and renowned Canadian
computer scientist Yoshua Bengio were also signatories.
The letter
called for AI developers to work with policymakers to “dramatically accelerate
development of robust AI governance systems,” which should “at a minimum
include: new and capable regulatory authorities dedicated to AI.”
AI labs are
locked in “an out-of-control race to develop and deploy ever more powerful
digital minds that no one – not even their creators – can understand, predict,
or reliably control,” the letter warned.
Rishi
Sunak’s new technology chief Michelle Donelan unveiled the government’s
blueprint for regulating AI, insisting a heavy-handed approach is off the
agenda | Leon Neal/Getty Images
Back in the
U.K., Ellen Judson, head of the Centre for the Analysis of Social Media at the
think tank Demos, warned that the U.K. approach of “setting out principles
alone” was “not enough.”
“Without
the teeth of legal obligations, this is an approach which will result in a
patchwork of regulatory guidance that will do little to fundamentally shift the
incentives that lead to risky and unethical uses of AI,” she said.
But
Technology Minister Paul Scully told the BBC he was “not sure” about pausing
further AI developments. He said the government's proposals should "dispel
any of those concerns from Elon Musk and those other figures.”
“What we’re
trying to do is to have a situation where we can think as government and think
as a sector through the risks but also the benefits of AI — and make sure we
can have a framework around this to protect us from the harms,” he said.
Long time
coming
Industry
concerns about the U.K.’s ability to make policy in their area are countered by
some of those who have worked closely with the British government on AI policy.
Its
approach to policymaking has been “very consultative,” according to Sue Daley,
a director at the industry body TechUK, who has been closely following AI
developments for a number of years.
In 2018
ministers set up the Centre for Data Ethics and Innovation and the Office for
AI, working across the government’s digital and business departments until it
moved to the newly-created Department for Science, Innovation and Technology
earlier this year.
The Office
for AI is staffed by a “good team of people,” Daly said, while also pointing to
the work the U.K.’s well-regarded regulators, like the Information
Commissioner’s Office, had been doing on artificial intelligence “for some
time.”
Greg Clark,
the Conservative chairman of parliament’s science and technology committee,
said he thought the government was right to “think carefully.” The former
business secretary stressed that is his own view rather than the committee
view.
“There's a
danger in rushing to adopt extensive regulations precipitously that have not
been properly thought through and stress-tested, and that could prove to be an
encumbrance to us and could impede the positive applications of AI,” he added.
But he said the government should “proceed quickly” from white paper to
regulatory framework “during the months ahead.”
Public view
Outside
Westminster, the potential implications of the technology are yet to be fully
realized, surveys suggest.
Public
First, a Westminster-based consultancy, which conducted a raft of polling into
public attitudes to artificial intelligence earlier this month, found that
beyond fears about unemployment, people were pretty positive about AI.
“It
certainly pales into insignificance compared to the other things that they are
worried about like the prospect of armed conflict, or even the impact of
climate change,” James Frayne, a founding partner of Public First, who
conducted the polling said. “This falls way down the priority list,” he said.
But he
cautioned this could change.
“One
assumes that at some point there will be an event which shocks them, and shakes
them, and makes them think very differently about AI,” he added.
“At that
point there will be great demands for the government to make sure that they're
all over this in terms of regulation. They will expect the government to not
only move very quickly, but to have made significant progress already,” he
said.
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