UN Security Council debates risks, benefits of AI: ‘Responsibility to future generations’

The United Nations Security Council held its first discussion on artificial intelligence (AI) and associated risks, with a number of leaders highlighting the dangerous potential the technology possesses in the wrong hands. 

“The malicious use of AI systems for terrorist, criminal or state purposes could cause horrific levels of deaths and destruction, widespread trauma and deep psychological damage on an unimaginable scale,” U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said in his remarks at the meeting. “Generative AI has enormous potential for good and evil at scale.”

“Its creators themselves have warned that much bigger, potentially catastrophic and existential risks lie ahead,” he added. “Without action to address these risks, we are derelict in our responsibilities to present and future generations.”

Guterres previously called for the creation of a U.N. watchdog to monitor AI development and use around the world, and he welcomed calls from some member states to follow that path. 

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Amb. Jeffrey DeLaurentis, the U.S. acting deputy representative to the U.N., tried to highlight the positive uses and potential for AI, such as crop management, weather predictions and medical assessment. 

“Used appropriately, AI can accelerate progress toward achieving sustainable development goals,” DeLaurentis told Security Council members, acknowledging as well the potential to “compound threats and intensify conflicts” through enhancing cyberoperations and increasing the potential for effective misinformation. 

“We, therefore, welcome this discussion to understand how the Council can find the right balance between maximizing AI’s benefits while mitigating its risks,” he stressed, urging collaboration with private industry and activists, as “experiences have taught us success comes from working with a range of actors.”

DeLaurentis pointed to the work the U.S. has already undertaken to tackle the problem, highlighting the Biden administration’s 2022 blueprint for an AI Bill of Rights as well as military integration. 

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Britain’s James Cleverly, who serves as secretary of state for foreign, commonwealth and developmental affairs and chaired the Security Council meeting Tuesday morning, claimed that “the biggest AI-induced transformations are still to come,” occurring on a scale “impossible” to comprehend and creating “immense” benefit for humanity. 

“AI will fundamentally alter every aspect of human life,” he said, focusing on the ability to “enhance or disrupt global strategic stability.” 

“It challenges our fundamental assumptions about defense and deterrence,” Cleverly argued. “It poses moral questions about accountability for lethal decisions on the battlefield.

“That’s why we urgently need to shape the global governance of transformative technologies,” he added. “Because AI knows no borders.”

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Cleverly pointed to what he called four “irreducible principles” the U.K. was founded on that he believes could serve the U.N. as well, namely a desire to see AI support freedom and democracy, to remain consistent with rule of law and human rights, to remain safe and predictable by design, and to maintain public trust. 

“In that spirit, let us work together to ensure peace and security as we pass across the threshold of an unfamiliar world,” he concluded.

Not all countries pursued such a utopian view, with the Chinese government arguing the U.N. rules must reflect the views of developing countries, claiming that some “developed countries” have rushed to control AI. 

“Certain developed countries, in order to seek technological hegemony, make efforts to build their exclusive small clubs and maliciously obstruct the technological development of other countries and artificially create technological barriers,” Chinese Ambassador Zhang Jun said. “China firmly opposes these behaviors.”

Other speakers included representatives from Japan, Mozambique and the United Arab Emirates. 

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