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UK has no intention of developing fully autonomous weapon systems, defence minister says

Key points:

  • The UK does not currently possess fully autonomous weapon systems and has no plans to develop them.
  • James Cartlidge, Minister of State for Defence Procurement, stated that while the UK does not rule out the incorporation of AI into weapon systems, it emphasizes the need for “context-appropriate human involvement” in the identification, selection, and targeting of potential threats.
  • These comments were made in response to concerns raised by Theresa Villiers, a Conservative former cabinet minister, about the use of AI in defense capabilities. She asserted that weapon systems should always be under human control and never operate autonomously.

Summary:

In a response to concerns about the use of artificial intelligence (AI) in defense capabilities, James Cartlidge, the UK’s Minister of State for Defence Procurement, clarified that the UK has no intention of developing fully autonomous weapon systems. While the incorporation of AI into weapon systems is not ruled out, the UK stresses the importance of context-appropriate human involvement in critical decision-making processes such as threat identification, selection, and targeting. Any weapon systems used by the UK military would be governed by the Ministry of Defence’s robust framework of legal safety and regulatory compliance regimes, irrespective of the technology involved.

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Sunak and Biden promise action on AI, data sharing, defence and green subsidies

Key Points:

  • The US and UK announced the Atlantic Declaration, a partnership focused on pledges covering artificial intelligence, critical minerals, clean energy, and security concerns rather than a traditional trade deal. This agreement could mitigate the impact of Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act on British firms.
  • The Declaration includes commitments to draft a Joint Clean Energy Supply Chain Action Plan by the end of 2023 and to work towards a deal allowing critical minerals for electric vehicles mined in the UK to be eligible for tax credits under the new US legislation.
  • The two nations agreed to collaborate on “critical and emerging technologies”, with a roadmap potentially covering artificial intelligence, 5G and 6G telecoms, quantum computing, semiconductors, and engineering biology within a year.

Summary:

The US and UK have announced the Atlantic Declaration, an agreement that aims to soften the impact of the US’s Inflation Reduction Act on UK firms. The agreement, described as a “new economic partnership for a new age” by UK Chancellor Rishi Sunak, includes several pledges covering artificial intelligence, critical minerals, clean energy, and security. Notably, the declaration includes a commitment for both nations to work towards an agreement that would make critical minerals for electric vehicles mined in the UK eligible for tax credits under the new US legislation. The two nations also pledged to draft a Joint Clean Energy Supply Chain Action Plan by the end of 2023. Furthermore, both countries have agreed to collaborate on “critical and emerging technologies,” promising to draft a roadmap that could include AI, 5G and 6G telecoms, quantum computing, semiconductors, and engineering biology within a year.

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AI poses national security threat, warns terror watchdog

The creators of artificial intelligence need to abandon their “tech utopian” mindset, according to the terror watchdog, amid fears that the new technology could be used to groom vulnerable individuals.

Jonathan Hall KC, whose role is to review the adequacy of terrorism legislation, said the national security threat from AI was becoming ever more apparent and the technology needed to be designed with the intentions of terrorists firmly in mind.

He said too much AI development focused on the potential positives of the technology while neglecting to consider how terrorists might use it to carry out attacks.

“They need to have some horrible little 15-year-old neo-Nazi in the room with them, working out what they might do. You’ve got to hardwire the defences against what you know people will do with it,” said Hall.

The government’s independent reviewer of terrorism legislation admitted he was increasingly concerned by the scope for artificial intelligence chatbots to persuade vulnerable or neurodivergent individuals to launch terrorist attacks.

“What worries me is the suggestibility of humans when immersed in this world and the computer is off the hook. Use of language, in the context of national security, matters because ultimately language persuades people to do things.”

The security services are understood to be particularly concerned with the ability of AI chatbots to groom children, who are already a growing part of MI5’s terror caseload.

As calls grow for regulation of the technology following warnings last week from AI pioneers that it could threaten the survival of the human race, it is expected that the prime minister, Rishi Sunak, will raise the issue when he travels to the US on Wednesday to meet President Biden and senior congressional figures.

Back in the UK, efforts are intensifying to confront national security challenges posed by AI with a partnership between MI5 and the Alan Turing Institute, the national body for data science and artificial intelligence, leading the way.

Alexander Blanchard, a digital ethics research fellow in the institute’s defence and security programme, said its work with the security services indicated the UK was treating the security challenges presented by AI extremely seriously.

“There’s a lot of a willingness among defence and security policy makers to understand what’s going on, how actors could be using AI, what the threats are.

“There really is a sense of a need to keep abreast of what’s going on. There’s work on understanding what the risks are, what the long-term risks are [and] what the risks are for next-generation technology.”

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