UN Secretary-General Supports Creation of International AI Regulatory Body Similar to Nuclear Regulatory Agency
On Monday, Antonio Guterres, the Secretary-General of the United Nations, supported a suggestion made by certain executives in the field of artificial intelligence to establish a global regulatory body for AI, similar to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
A generative AI technology that can spin authoritative prose from text prompts, ChatGPT has taken audiences by storm since its launch six months ago, becoming the fastest-growing app of all time. AI has also raised concerns about its ability to create deep fake images and other misinformation.
“The alarm bells about the newest form of artificial intelligence – generative artificial intelligence – are falling on deaf ears. And they are loudest from the developers who designed it,” Guterres told reporters. “We have to take those warnings seriously.”
He has announced plans to begin work by the end of the year to establish a high-level AI advisory body that will regularly review AI governance arrangements and make recommendations on how they can align with human rights, the rule of law and the common good.
But on Monday, he added: “I would support the idea that we could have an artificial intelligence agency … inspired by what the International Atomic Energy Agency is today.”
Guterres said such a model could be “very interesting”, but noted that “only member states can create it, not the UN Secretariat”. Founded in 1957, the Vienna-based IAEA promotes the safe and peaceful use of nuclear technology while monitoring potential violations of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). It has 176 member states.
OpenAI, the creator of ChatGPT, said last month that a body like the IAEA could set limits on deployment, enforce compliance with security standards and monitor the use of computing power.
British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has also supported the idea and said he wants Britain to be the home of a global AI safety code. Britain is scheduled to hold a summit later this year on how coordinated international action can tackle the risks of artificial intelligence.
Guterres said he supported the plan to hold the summit in Britain, but said there was “serious work” ahead. He said he plans to appoint a scientific advisory committee made up of artificial intelligence experts and chief scientists from UN agencies in the coming days.