86 Nations Call for 'Secure, Trustworthy AI' in Non-Binding Summit Declaration
Eighty-six countries including the US and China signed a declaration calling for secure and trustworthy AI at the five-day AI Impact Summit in New Delhi, though the statement included no concrete regulatory commitments and drew criticism for being too generic.
Dozens of nations including the United States and China called for "secure, trustworthy and robust" artificial intelligence, in a summit declaration issued on Feb 21 criticised for being too generic to protect the public. The statement signed by 86 countries did not include concrete commitments to regulate the fast-developing technology, instead highlighting several voluntary, non-binding initiatives.
"AI's promise is best realised only when its benefits are shared by humanity," said the statement, released by the five-day AI Impact Summit. It called the advent of generative AI "an inflection point in the trajectory of technological evolution". "Advancing secure, trustworthy and robust AI is foundational to building trust and maximising societal and economic benefits," it said.
The summit – attended by tens of thousands including top tech CEOs – was the fourth annual global meeting to discuss the promises and pitfalls of AI, and the first hosted by a developing country. Hot topics discussed included AI's potential societal benefits, such as drug discovery and translation tools, but also the threat of job losses, online abuse and the heavy power consumption of data centres.
The United States, home to industry-leading companies such as Google and ChatGPT maker OpenAI, did not sign last year's summit statement, warning that regulation could be a drag on innovation. "We totally reject global governance of AI," the US delegation head said at the summit on Feb 20. The United States signed a bilateral declaration on AI with India on Feb 20, pledging to "pursue a global approach to AI that is unapologetically friendly to entrepreneurship and innovation". But it also put its name to the main summit statement, the release of which was originally expected on Feb 20 but was delayed by one day to maximise the number of signatories, India's government said.
The co-executive director of the AI Now Institute criticised the lack of a meaningful declaration, saying it was just "another round of generic voluntary promises". "The fact that this declaration drew such wide endorsement, especially from the US, which held out in Paris, tells you what kind of agenda it is: One that is AI-industry approved, not one that meaningfully protects the public," she said.
The summit declaration on Feb 21 struck a cautious tone on AI safety risks, from misinformation and surveillance to fears of the creation of devastating new pathogens. "Deepening our understanding of the potential security aspects remains important," it said. "We recognise the importance of security in AI systems, industry-led voluntary measures, and the adoption of technical solutions, and appropriate policy frameworks that enable innovation."
On jobs, it emphasised reskilling initiatives to "support participants in preparation for a future AI driven economy". And "we underscore the importance of developing energy-efficient AI systems" given the technology's growing demands on natural resources, it said.
A computing expert and AI safety campaigner said that the commitments were "not completely inconsequential". "The most important thing is that there are any commitments at all," he said. Countries should "build on these voluntary agreements to develop binding legal commitments to protect their peoples so that AI development and deployment can proceed without imposing unacceptable risks", he said.
Analysts had said earlier that the summit's broad focus, and vague promises made at the previous meetings in France, South Korea and Britain, would make strong pledges or immediate action unlikely.
The next AI summit will take place in Geneva in 2027. In the meantime, a UN panel on AI will start work towards "science-led governance". The UN General Assembly has confirmed 40 members for a group called the Independent International Scientific Panel on Artificial Intelligence.
India has used the summit to push its ambition to catch up with the United States and China in the AI field, including through large-scale data centre construction powered by new nuclear plants. Delhi expects more than $200 billion in investments over the next two years, and US tech giants unveiled a raft of new deals and infrastructure projects in the country during the summit.