All Content from Business Insider 07月28日 16:24
China says it wants the world to work together to govern AI. The US, not so much.
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上海世界人工智能大会上,中国总理李强呼吁建立全球AI安全协调组织,而美国总统特朗普则强调放松监管以保持领先。这一鲜明对比反映了中美在AI治理理念上的根本分歧。AI行业领袖普遍担忧AI带来的潜在风险,如虚假信息、经济不平等乃至失控,呼吁加强国际合作和监管。然而,美国奉行的“美国优先”政策和特朗普政府的放松监管立场,可能会阻碍全球AI治理框架的形成,使得在AI安全这一关键议题上达成全球共识和有效协调变得更加困难,尽管在确保人类不被AI取代这一点上似乎存在广泛共识。

🌐 中国倡导全球AI治理协调:中国总理李强在世界人工智能大会上提出,全球AI治理目前存在碎片化问题,各国在监管理念和规则上存在显著差异。他呼吁建立一个协调性的全球组织,以形成具有广泛共识的AI治理框架,旨在加强国际合作以应对AI发展带来的挑战。

🇺🇸 美国强调放松监管与领先地位:与中国的协调呼吁形成对比,美国总统特朗普则推行“AI行动计划”,旨在解除对AI企业的监管负担,并明确表示将不惜一切代价确保美国在AI领域的全球领先地位。这种政策导向更侧重于国内产业发展和竞争优势。

⚠️ AI风险与监管呼声:包括OpenAI、Google DeepMind等在内的AI行业领袖和科学家对AI可能带来的风险,如虚假信息、经济不平等乃至人类失控等问题表示担忧。他们曾联合呼吁加强AI监管,并认为AI风险的规避应作为全球优先事项,如同应对流行病和核战争一样。

🤝 国际合作的现实阻碍:尽管AI安全(如确保人类不被AI取代)被认为是全球普遍认同的议题,但地缘政治和各国发展战略的差异,特别是美国政府当前的政策取向,可能成为实现有效国际合作和达成全球AI治理协议的重大障碍。全球AI治理需要不同国家和地区间的对话与妥协。

🔑 核心分歧在于治理模式:文章揭示了中美在AI发展路径上的核心分歧,中国倾向于通过全球协调和监管来管理AI风险,而美国则更侧重于通过放松监管来激发国内创新和保持技术优势。这种治理模式的差异是理解当前全球AI发展格局的关键。

Two humanoid robots box during the 2025 World Artificial Intelligence Conference in Shanghai, China.

At this weekend's World Artificial Intelligence Conference in Shanghai, boxing robots thrilled the crowd. But the real heavyweight bout is between the US and China over the future of AI.

The theme of the Shanghai conference, which was organized in part by the Chinese government and lasts until Monday, is "global solidarity in the AI era." In his keynote address, Chinese Premier Li Qiang called for a new global organization to coordinate responses to AI advancements.

"Overall, global AI governance is still fragmented. Countries have great differences, particularly in terms of areas such as regulatory concepts, institutional rules," he said, speaking in Chinese. "We should strengthen coordination to form a global AI governance framework that has broad consensus as soon as possible."

Li's pitch contrasted with comments made by US President Donald Trump earlier in the week. On Wednesday, the US president released his "AI Action Plan" and signed three executive orders. All of them, Trump said, were designed to free AI companies from regulatory burdens.

"From this day forward, it'll be a policy of the United States to do whatever it takes to lead the world in artificial intelligence," he said before signing his executive orders.

Trump's doctrine will likely benefit American AI companies. Many of them, like OpenAI, Meta, and Google DeepMind, submitted recommendations to the president and praised the new policies.

However, it's an open question whether forgoing stricter regulations in the United States will benefit humanity.

AI industry leaders have long warned about the threats AI could pose — everything from disinformation and economic inequality to total loss of all human control.

In 2023, a group of prominent AI scientists, including OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, Google DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis, and Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei, signed a one-sentence statement calling for AI regulation.

"Mitigating the risk of extinction from AI should be a global priority alongside other societal-scale risks such as pandemics and nuclear war," it said.

Altman said last year that AI could have a "negative impact way beyond the realm of one country." He said the tech should be regulated by an "international agency looking at the most powerful systems and ensuring reasonable safety testing."

One way to do that is through an agreed-upon global framework similar to the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, which is enforced by the United Nations and which all but four countries have signed. The UN tech chief, Doreen Bogdan-Martin, told the AFP on Saturday that the world urgently needed a global deal to regulate AI.

"We have the EU approach. We have the Chinese approach. Now we're seeing the US approach. I think what's needed is for those approaches to dialogue," she said.

The Trump administration, however, is likely to hinder any such international agreement. Beyond its own effort to loosen restrictions at home, it has largely dismissed other global collaborations in favor of its America First policy.

At the Shanghai conference, Geoffrey Hinton, a computer scientist known as the Godfather of AI, said international cooperation on AI would be difficult. He said few countries agree on basics like how misinformation should be policed.

He said there was one subject, however, on which the whole world seems aligned: Humans should not let AI supersede their control.

"So on that particular issue, it should be easy to get international collaboration," he said at the conference, adding, however, that it "may be difficult with the current US administration."

"But rational countries will collaborate on that," he said.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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