June 15, 2023
3 mins read

No 10 celebrates London Tech Week

This week, Sunak had met with leading innovators who support millions of jobs and help grow the economy. “And it’s making a difference,” he said…reports Asian Lite News

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has said that this year’s London Tech Week is an important moment for the UK.

Sharing a photograph of him standing next to 10 Downing Street door which spells out LTW in binary code to celebrate London Tech Week, Sunak stressed his priorities on economic growth and innovation and vision of UK being the best place in the world to start, grow and invest in a tech business.

“One of my top priorities is to grow the economy. And the more we innovate, the more we grow,” he said, adding that UK is already home to 160 unicorns and are leading the way on AI and AI safety.

This week, Sunak had met with leading innovators who support millions of jobs and help grow the economy. “And it’s making a difference,” he said.

He announced that venture capital company Andreessen Horowitz is opening a new base in the UK and HSBC is launching a new Innovation Bank.

Two days ago, while addressing LTW 2023, Sunak said Artificial intelligence (AI) doesn’t respect traditional national borders so we urgently need global cooperation between nations and labs.

Sunak said that he wants to make the UK not just the intellectual home but the geographical home of global AI safety regulation.

“Just as we unite through the Conference of the Parties (COP) to tackle climate change, the UK will host the first ever Summit on global AI Safety later this year,” the Prime Minister announced.

According to him, when the tectonic plates of technology are shifting — not just in AI, but in quantum, synthetic biology, semiconductors, and much more — “we cannot rest, satisfied with where we stand”.

“We must act – and act quickly – if we want not only to retain our position as one of the world’s tech capitals but to go even further and make this the best country in the world to start, grow, and invest in tech businesses,” he emphasised.

AI has helped the paralysed to walk and discover superbug-killing antibiotics.

“Combined with the computational power of quantum we could be on the precipice of discovering cures for diseases like cancer and dementia or ways to grow crops that could feed the entire world,” said Sunak.

However, people are concerned about the safety of AI.

“The very pioneers of AI are warning us about the ways these technologies could undermine our values and freedoms through to the most extreme risks of all. And that’s why leading on AI also means leading on AI safety,” Sunak noted.

“So, we’re building a new partnership between our vibrant academia, brilliant AI companies, and a government that gets it,” he added.

With 100 million pounds for its expert taskforce, the UK is dedicating more funding to AI safety than any other government.

The UK has already invested record sums including 900 million pounds in compute technology and 2.5 billion pounds in quantum technology.

“AI can help us achieve the holy grail of public service reform: better, more efficient services,” he added.

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