
I feel very uncomfortable about the AI Security Institute, and this article by its creator, ex-PM Rishi Sunak, encapsulates why:
He frames it as a way of avoiding regulating AI.
He says this categorically. “If politicians are blithe about the risks [of AI], they will vote for those who favour regulation.” And he makes it clear he thinks regulation would be bad: “western governments shouldn’t restrict innovation in the race against China.”
This is a man who now works for both Anthropic and Microsoft (not disclosed in the article).
Evaluating the safety of AI models is good. But not in place of regulating the technology itself, and the companies behind it.
Besides, as he points out, companies only give the AI Security Institute access to their models voluntarily. This means the UK government relies on good relations with big tech, which in turn makes it even less likely to regulate.
It is far from clear how much the AI Security Institute has actually achieved with its astronomical public funding. What *is* clear, though, is that the people who set it up see it as a way of ensuring *less* regulation of AI companies, not more. This is very bad news.

Rishi Sunak@RishiSunak
There’s one area where we’re teaching America a lesson on AI. How do you stay ahead of China in the AI race while reassuring the public that powerful models are safe? In Britain, we’ve come up with a good answer 👇 thetimes.com/business/artic…
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