US and China must get serious about AI risk

Washington and Beijing must engage on the dangers and opportunities of AI amid rapid development, or it would be irresponsible. An opinion piece highlights progress in AI and nuclear security talks but calls for sustained senior-level diplomacy.

An opinion piece in the South China Morning Post stresses that the US and China should not overlook AI risks amid their competition. It notes that no reasonable person would argue for handing nuclear weapon control to AI, yet the Chinese government remains skeptical of US risk reduction proposals. Russia had opposed similar language in multilateral bodies, and bilateral talks on AI and nuclear security risked creating daylight between Russia and China.

Nevertheless, the article describes the outcome as significant, showing that the two AI superpowers can engage in constructive risk management while vying for leadership. Referencing Geneva talks as a foundation, it urges sustained senior-level diplomacy on AI risks as development and deployment accelerate in both civil and military spheres.

The piece portrays such diplomacy as low-hanging fruit, but notes that with China's caution on security matters, progress is not a foregone conclusion. It does not report a new specific event but calls for action based on prior foundations.

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White House scene illustrating Trump administration's National AI Legislative Framework unifying rules against China's dominance.
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Trump administration moves to unify AI rules against China

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The Trump administration has released a National AI Legislative Framework to unify federal AI rules, address national security concerns, and counter Beijing's growing dominance in the sector. It argues that state laws should not govern areas better suited to the federal government or contradict US strategy for global AI leadership. The White House looks forward to working with Congress to turn it into legislation.

An author attending the Asia Leaders Series in Zurich, Switzerland, suggests the US and China could cooperate on AI risks, similar to their 1972 alignment against a shared threat. The forum's discussions revealed that current global strains are normal rather than exceptional.

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Staatschefs und Tech-Führer aus über 80 Ländern versammelten sich in Neu-Delhi, um den Einfluss der Künstlichen Intelligenz auf die Menschheit zu bewerten. Der von Narendra Modi einberufene Gipfel thematisierte Bedenken hinsichtlich außer Kontrolle geratender KI-Risiken. Die New-Delhi-Erklärung wurde nach ein Tag verlängerten Verhandlungen unterzeichnet.

Der ranghohe Kongressführer P. Chidambaram hat die Einführung künstlicher Intelligenz in Indien befürwortet und ihre Potenziale zur Steigerung der Produktivität hervorgehoben, während er Bedenken hinsichtlich weit verbreiteter Arbeitsplatzverluste äußerte. In seinem Meinungsartikel diskutiert er die unterschiedlichen Auswirkungen auf entwickelte und Entwicklungswirtschaften und fordert Maßnahmen, um Technologie mit Beschäftigungsfähigkeit in Einklang zu bringen. Er fragt, welche Rolle Menschen spielen werden, wenn KI die meisten Arbeiten übernimmt.

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China's Supreme People's Court states that its courts "properly adjudicated cases involving artificial intelligence" and "accurately grasped the 'margin for error' in technological innovation". In a report presented to the National People's Congress, the court emphasized applying "resolute legal regulation" to acts exploiting AI that infringe on rights or disrupt social order, while promoting orderly development of the digital economy. The Supreme People's Procuratorate reported that China prosecuted 4,739 individuals last year in cases related to data security breaches in fields such as artificial intelligence and e-commerce.

Chinese political scientist Zheng Yongnian has warned Southeast Asian nations not to assume US backing or leverage US-China tensions for their own gains, as such a strategy could backfire. Members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) face a delicate balancing act between the US and China, its largest trading partner, amid ramped-up naval presence by both Beijing and Washington in the South China Sea.

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As cybersecurity agencies warned of risks in the popular open-source AI agent OpenClaw (see prior coverage), China's local governments are pushing ahead with subsidies and development plans, exemplified by Wuxi's comprehensive support program. Central authorities, including the People's Bank of China, urge caution, underscoring tensions between local enthusiasm and national security priorities.

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