UN panel issues preliminary AI report

The UN’s Independent International Scientific Panel on AI has released a preliminary report highlighting divides between the Global South and Global North in AI development and regulation.

The report points to challenges faced by poorer countries in regulating advanced AI models developed elsewhere. It notes that influence in AI requires abundant electricity, highly capitalised firms, and scarce talent commanding high salaries.

The document compares AI’s rapid progress to social media, which affected public discourse despite having more time to address issues. It lists harms already caused by AI firms, including parasocial fantasies linked to fatalities, damage to news media, deepfakes eroding trust, and ties to global financial systems.

India’s experience is cited, where access to Anthropic’s Mythos and Fable models was withdrawn by the U.S. The report stresses the need for governments to hold AI companies accountable.

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Illustration of US official revoking Anthropic AI access due to China concerns, showing models going offline.
Hoton da AI ya samar

Trump administration restricts Anthropic AI models over China ties

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The Trump administration directed Anthropic to revoke access to its advanced AI models following concerns about ties to China. The move led the company to take its most powerful offerings offline last week.

The US government has denied foreign users access to Anthropic's latest AI models. The measure was taken last Friday allegedly for security reasons.

An Ruwaito ta hanyar AI

Anthropic has released a new cyber-focused AI model called Mythos, capable of detecting software flaws faster than humans and generating exploits. The model has raised alarms among governments and companies for potentially turbocharging hacking by exposing vulnerabilities quicker than they can be patched. Officials worldwide are scrambling to assess the risks.

A recent podcast episode raised concerns that the UK government’s growing use of AI tools in public services—and potentially in elements of legislative work—could increase security and sovereignty risks tied to overseas providers.

An Ruwaito ta hanyar AI

President Trump signed a National Security Presidential Memorandum on Friday directing faster integration of advanced AI tools into US defense operations. The move follows an executive order earlier in the week aimed at regulating the AI industry.

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