
The United States and the United Kingdom are the countries that refuse to sign the final statement of the French-sponsored AI summit, which calls for promoting international governance of artificial intelligence.
In a speech ahead of the publication, Vice President JD Vance strongly opposed the EU’s tough regulatory approach to social media platforms and artificial intelligence, and what he said foreign governments are “considering tightening the screws of American tech companies” .
Dave Pares, spokesman for Prime Minister Keir Starmer, told reporters on Tuesday that although Britain “works closely with the French” throughout the summit, “we can’t do it yet Agree with all parts of the leader’s declaration.”
Signed by 60 participating countries or organizations, the communiqué lists several priorities, including “strengthening international cooperation and promoting international governance coordination” and “ensure that AI is open to all, including inclusiveness, transparency, Ethical, safe, safe, safe and trustworthy, aligned with international frameworks.”
More than two years ago, the launch of Chatgpt started a global AI competition, with technology companies and others investing billions of dollars in computer chips, data centers and energy projects, and AI Systems Developers itself. French President Emmanuel Macron and others expressed concern that Europe lags behind the United States and China in AI development, using the summit as a total of 100.9 billion euros ($113 billion) for French AI-related projects Opportunity.
China and India, co-host of the summit, are both signatories. A communique released by Macron’s office shows that the Paris summit includes participants from more than 100 countries.
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