
"Everything about advanced AI is transnational by design - the systems are developed, tested and deployed in a variety of places across borders and within multiple supply chains, and then integrated into products that are used at a global scale. I worry at times when we have this variety of approaches that we're not actually addressing the broader safety or human rights risks that are at the centre of what everyone is trying collectively to solve."
"The current issue is not a lack of activity, but the bigger challenge of fragmentation. An alignment in international standards could lead to a base layer of agreement addressing the broader safety or human rights risks that are at the centre of what everyone is trying collectively to solve."
Tech executives and lawmakers discussed AI regulation during a UK parliamentary inquiry, focusing on whether current safeguards adequately protect human rights and democratic freedoms. Microsoft and Meta representatives emphasized that advanced AI systems are inherently transnational, developed and deployed across multiple countries and supply chains. They advocated for greater harmonization of regulatory standards globally rather than fragmented national approaches. The inquiry examined concerns including misinformation, accountability, child safety, and existential risks. Previous committee findings indicated that UK regulators face resource constraints rather than insufficient statutory powers, limiting their ability to oversee AI harms effectively.
#ai-regulation #international-governance #human-rights-protection #regulatory-harmonization #ai-safety
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