27
Acknowledged
US and EU pursue distinct AI governance for competitive regulatory advantage.
Conclusion
In our interim Report we highlighted moves by both the United States and European Union to develop their own approaches to AI governance. The subsequent White House Executive Order and the EU AI Act are clear attempts to secure competitive regulatory advantage.
Government Response Summary
The government reiterates its commitment to making the UK a world leader in AI and states it will continue to engage closely with international partners as it further develops its approach to AI governance, including legislative proposals.
Paragraph Reference
129
Government Response
Acknowledged
Government Response
Acknowledged
HM Government
Acknowledged
The Government is committed to making the UK a world leader in AI, to drive economic renewal, boost living standards, and deliver growth for people across the country. effectively tackle cross-border challenges that AI poses. We will continue to engage closely with our international partners, including the US and EU, as we further develop our approach to AI governance including our legislative proposals. As the Committee has noted, through the AI Safety Summit and AI Seoul Summit the UK has demonstrated international leadership on frontier AI safety, bringing together international partners to build consensus on the safe development and deployment of AI. We have also built world-leading state capacity in AI safety through our AI Safety Institute, which is furthering the science of AI safety through the Network of AISIs. We will continue to build on this work with our partners, both at the upcoming AI Action Summit in France, and in a range of multilateral fora. We champion the multi-stakeholder, industry-led standards development process, where Government is one of the stakeholders in that ecosystem. We want to promote a robust and diverse digital standards ecosystem, strengthening and building international partners to foster collaboration and promote integrity in standards development. In regards to standards specifically government recognises that AI standards, including those used in assurance and certification schemes, can help organisations put our proposed regulatory principles into practice, innovate responsibly, and build public confidence. Standards can also complement sector-specific approaches to AI regulation by providing common benchmarks and practical guidance to organisations. The UK’s AI Standards Hub is a partnership between the Alan Turing Institute, British Standards Institution and National Physical Laboratory, supported by DSIT. The UK’s AI Standards Hub is built upon 4 pillars, Tracking and sharing information on AI standards; Convening, connecting, and community building; Education, training, and professional development; Thought leadership & international engagement Twelve challenges of AI governence revisited Government response to Committee recommendations 32 – 33
Source
Report
Third Report - Governance of artificial intelligence (AI)
28 May 2024
HC 38
Addressee Bodies
Department for Science, Innovation and Technology
Timeline
Recommendation age
2.0 yrs
Report published
28 May 2024