Working for a trustworthy, ethical and responsible model of AI
Baroness Joanna Shields, Multi-stakeholder Expert Group Plenary Chair and GPAI Steering Committee Co-Chair outlines the key issues to be addressed at the Artificial Intelligence Summit to be held in Paris on 11 and 12 November. More specifically, she highlights the considerable body of work already completed by the working groups.
Many challenges remain to make AI ethical and responsible
Renaud Vedel, the incoming Co-Chair of the GPAI Steering Committee, reiterates the mission of the Global Partnership on AI launched in 2020, which will hold this year’s Summit in Paris. The coordinator of the French government’s national strategy for artificial intelligence also talks about the many challenges that remain.
Students from all over the world are helping to promote the future of AI
Whether future computer scientists or social scientists, students from around the world have temporarily quit their lecture theatres to become investigators for GPAI. It’s a valuable way for these future professionals to get to grips with the issues of AI in the corporate world and prepare for their own futures in that world.
Interview with Yuko Harayama
There will be no battle between man and machine. Instead, GPAI experts are advocating a form of collaboration that has yet to be identified against a background of profound transformation in work practices as a result of AI. It’s a process that will require a lengthy socialisation phase for employees.
Biodiversity… the next challenge for the GPAI
Next year, the GPAI experts intend to extend their thinking to include the effects of climate change on biodiversity in order to understand how AI tools can be used for this purpose.
Interview with Yoshua Bengio
Floods, earthquakes, pandemics: Artificial Intelligence can help to solve the challenges of climate change and epidemics. But it is important that we act quickly and develop a globally coordinated approach to these issues. Watch the full interview with Yoshua Bengio