US, Britain have not signed Paris AI summit declaration
- A total of 61 countries endorsed a joint declaration on the need for 'open, inclusive, and ethical' artificial intelligence at the Paris AI Summit.
- The U.S. And the U.K. Did not sign the final statement due to national interests and regulatory concerns.
- U.S. Vice President J.D. Vance expressed interest in international AI collaboration while warning against excessive regulation.
- The declaration emphasized the importance of making AI 'sustainable' for societies and the planet.
94 Articles
94 Articles


Refusal to sign AI declaration was ‘based on what’s best for British people’
Government minister Alex Norris said the UK was not simply following the US in not signing a declaration at the close of the AI Action Summit.
Why US, UK refused to sign Paris AI Summit declaration
The US and the UK did not sign a final statement calling for an ‘inclusive’ AI sector at the Paris AI Summit, co-chaired by India. While London said the communique did not ‘sufficiently address harder questions around national security and the challenge AI poses to it’, Vice President JD Vance expressed Washington’s resistance to guardrails, saying it would ‘kill the industry’. This comes even as over 60 countries, including China, pledged on th…
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