Trump, DeepSeek in Focus as Nations Gather at Paris AI Summit
AI Action Summit to focus on open-source tech and tidy energy
Global agreement on AI principles looked for, not new regulation
Top CEOs including from Google, OpenAI to participate in
By Jeffrey Dastin and Elizabeth Pineau
PARIS, Feb 5 (Reuters) - All eyes are on the French capital next week to see if U.S. President Donald Trump ´ s administration can find commonalities with China and nearly 100 other nations on the safe advancement of artificial intelligence.
About a year after world powers reckoned with the dangers of AI in England ´ s Bletchley Park, a broader array of nations are gathering in Paris to talk about putting the innovation to work.
France, eager to promote its national market, is hosting the AI Action Summit together with India on Feb. 10 and 11, with a concentrate on areas where Europe ´ s second-largest economy has a benefit: easily available or "open-source" systems, and tidy energy to power data centers.
Mitigating labor disruption and promoting sovereignty in a worldwide AI market are likewise on the program.
Top executives from Alphabet, Microsoft and lots of other organizations are slated to go to. Government leaders are expected to dine on Monday with choose CEOs. And talks will consist of one on Tuesday by Sam Altman, president of OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT, 2 individuals associated with the summit informed Reuters.
It was less clear whether the U.S. will reach consensus with other nations on AI.
Since taking office on Jan. 20, President Trump has revoked former President Joe Biden ´ s 2023 executive order on the technology, set in movement a repeat withdrawal from the Paris Climate Agreement and dealt with Congressional calls to think about brand-new export controls on AI chips to counter rival China.
U.S. Vice President JD Vance will go to for the American delegation.
AI Action Summit to focus on open-source tech and tidy energy
Global agreement on AI principles looked for, not new regulation
Top CEOs including from Google, OpenAI to participate in
By Jeffrey Dastin and Elizabeth Pineau
PARIS, Feb 5 (Reuters) - All eyes are on the French capital next week to see if U.S. President Donald Trump ´ s administration can find commonalities with China and nearly 100 other nations on the safe advancement of artificial intelligence.
About a year after world powers reckoned with the dangers of AI in England ´ s Bletchley Park, a broader array of nations are gathering in Paris to talk about putting the innovation to work.
France, eager to promote its national market, is hosting the AI Action Summit together with India on Feb. 10 and 11, with a concentrate on areas where Europe ´ s second-largest economy has a benefit: easily available or "open-source" systems, and tidy energy to power data centers.
Mitigating labor disruption and promoting sovereignty in a worldwide AI market are likewise on the program.
Top executives from Alphabet, Microsoft and lots of other organizations are slated to go to. Government leaders are expected to dine on Monday with choose CEOs. And talks will consist of one on Tuesday by Sam Altman, president of OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT, 2 individuals associated with the summit informed Reuters.
It was less clear whether the U.S. will reach consensus with other nations on AI.
Since taking office on Jan. 20, President Trump has revoked former President Joe Biden ´ s 2023 executive order on the technology, set in movement a repeat withdrawal from the Paris Climate Agreement and dealt with Congressional calls to think about brand-new export controls on AI chips to counter rival China.
U.S. Vice President JD Vance will go to for the American delegation.