AI Safety Connect convenes 250 global leaders in New Delhi to advance international AI safety coordination
New Delhi [India], February 18 (ANI): AI Safety Connect (AISC) on Wednesday brought together around 250 senior stakeholders from governments, international organisations, frontier AI companies, civil society, and academia in New Delhi for a full-day programme focused on advancing international cooperation on AI safety and governance.
"The race to build ever more capable and powerful AI systems is accelerating, with AGI and advanced robotics on the horizon, and safety is clearly not the priority. This needs to change," said Nicolas Miailhe, Co-Founder of AISC, in his opening remarks.
The day's programme explored five core themes through nine panel sessions, special addresses, workshops, and demonstrations of practical AI safety tools.
India's approach to AI safety remained a central focus throughout the convening. Former India G20 Sherpa and ex-CEO of NITI Aayog Amitabh Kant delivered a special address, framing AI as a transformative force that must remain equitable.
He pointed to India's experience with digital public infrastructure as a model, noting that "battles for new technology are never won by the first mover" and arguing that India's linguistic diversity and scale position it to shape how AI serves the next five billion people moving from poverty to the middle class.
Donahoe emphasised that the most urgent AI safety and security risks are inherently transnational, and the solutions must be transnational.
The role of middle powers in shaping global AI governance emerged as one of the day's most significant discussions.
"We are not powerless spectators watching from the sidelines. We, the middle powers, represent the largest part of the world economy and the strongest democratic traditions. Together we form the majority," said Prime Minister Schoof.
International coordination mechanisms were scrutinised across multiple sessions, with participants examining how to translate principles into operational governance. Lucilla Sioli, Director of the European AI Office, outlined the EU's emerging approach to facilitating compliance through voluntary codes of practice, noting that 27 companies have already signed up. "AI, as we know, has no borders," said Sioli.
Sioli highlighted that the European AI Office would soon publish research in the journal Science on proportionate, risk-targeted AI evaluation methods.
The urgency of moving from principles to action was underscored by Dr Andrew Forrest, Founder of Minderoo Foundation, who delivered a forceful call for regulation in his opening address.
"You can't manage what you can't measure. Our moment in history is to ensure that the immeasurable becomes managed, that the measurable becomes regulated." He called on leaders across business, politics, and the social sector to come together to ensure that the potential harms of AI are checked with the same seriousness as its benefits are pursued.
AISC's engagement at the India AI Impact Summit continues with Shared Responsibility: Industry and the Future of AI Safety on 19 February, examining private-sector approaches to safety coordination, and International AI Safety Coordination: What Policymakers Need to Know on 20 February, a ministerial-level panel during the main Summit proceedings. (ANI)
Next Story