logo
UN agency pushes AI ethics standards as US-China tech rivalry deepens

UN agency pushes AI ethics standards as US-China tech rivalry deepens

The Star14 hours ago

A United Nations agency is rallying policymakers, non-government organisations and academics to support its ethics guidelines on artificial intelligence (AI) at a time when the technology is rapidly changing the world.
Unesco, the 194-member UN heritage agency that produced the world's first – and so far only – global AI ethics standards four years ago, hosted a forum in Bangkok this week to drive the adoption of its recommendations. However, there is a long way to go before the recommendations could be turned into a universal, actionable framework amid an intensifying AI race between the US and China, according to analysts.
At the opening on Wednesday of the third Unesco Global Forum on the Ethics of AI, Unesco director general Audrey Azoulay called for collaboration among governments, businesses and civil society to come up with an international solution. 'That is what Unesco is working to provide – preparing the world for AI and preparing AI for the world, ensuring it serves the common good,' she said.
The message comes as hopes are dimming for a global consensus on AI ethics. A bipartisan group of US lawmakers introduced a bill in both chambers of Congress to ban the federal use of China-linked AI tools such as DeepSeek, in the latest sign of hostility in the tech rivalry between the world's two largest economies.
Meanwhile, the world's largest AI companies, from US-based OpenAI and Google to China's DeepSeek, were absent from the forum, which attracted more than 1,000 participants and 35 government ministers, mainly from Asia-Pacific, Africa and Latin America.
When asked how other countries would respond to the divisions in the AI world, Wisit Wisitsora-At, Permanent Secretary at the Thai Ministry of Digital Economy and Society, said Thailand would not take sides in the US-China competition, adding that it would try to develop its own AI ecosystem.
Thai Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra, who is facing political pressure at home over a leaked phone call with Cambodian strongman Hun Sen, delivered a speech in English, listing her country's AI development goals, including 90,000 AI professionals and over US$15 billion in spending for AI infrastructure.
With the noticeable absence of American and Chinese government delegations at the three-day event – even though the US rejoined the group in 2023 after its withdrawal during the first Trump administration – the forum provided a stage for policymakers from the Asean region and 'global south' countries, from Malaysia and Indonesia to Zambia and Zimbabwe, to voice their ambitions, concerns and priorities in coping with AI.
Irakli Khodeli, the head of ethics at Unesco's AI unit, said in an interview on Thursday that different countries had their own priorities for now, with some highlighting 'security' while others were aiming for 'access to AI'.
A key aim of the gathering was to discuss the 'readiness assessment methodology', a tool to turn the UN body's AI ethics recommendations into policy actions. The assessment includes a questionnaire for governments, asking questions such as, 'Is there a specific consideration for the impact of AI on land and water use?'. More than 70 countries have taken part in the methodology.
'It is not a talk shop, it is a workshop for members to exchange notes,' Khodeli said of the event.
At the gathering, some participants publicly outlined the challenges faced in applying ethics guardrails to AI development. Rachel Adams, founding CEO of the Global Centre on AI Governance, a non-profit organisation in South Africa, and author of The New Empire of AI: The Future of Global Inequality , said many civil society groups were having funding problems since US President Donald Trump shut down the United States Agency for International Development.
During a panel discussion at the event, Zeng Yi, dean of the Beijing Institute of AI Safety and Governance and a professor with the Chinese Academy of Sciences, said it was not difficult for countries to agree on terminologies such as transparency, but it was much harder to translate them into actual measures on the ground.
Unesco sponsored the South China Morning Post's trip to the Bangkok event. - SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Two Sabah assemblymen, businessman plead not guilty in RM350,000 bribery case
Two Sabah assemblymen, businessman plead not guilty in RM350,000 bribery case

The Sun

time37 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Two Sabah assemblymen, businessman plead not guilty in RM350,000 bribery case

PETALING JAYA: Two Sabah assemblymen and a businessman pleaded not guilty at the Special Corruption Court in Kota Kinabalu today to charges involving RM350,000 in bribes related to mineral prospecting licence applications. Sindumin assemblyman Datuk Dr Yusof Yacob, Tanjung Batu assemblyman Datuk Andi Muhammad Suryady Bandy, and Selangor-based businessman Datuk Albert Tei Jiann Cheing appeared before Judge Jason Juga under the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) Act 2009. All three denied the charges. According to The Star, Dr Yusof was the first to be called, followed by Andi Muhammad and Tei. The trio arrived at the courthouse separately in the morning, with Tei entering at 8.40am, Andi at 8.46am, and Dr Yusof at 8.48am. The charges stem from alleged offences committed in 2023. MACC chief commissioner Tan Sri Azam Baki had earlier confirmed the arrest of a state assemblyman and a businessman on June 18 over suspected bribery involving RM200,000. Sources indicated the assemblyman, in his 60s, and the businessman, in his 30s, were accused of offences between 2023 and 2024. On June 23, Azam announced the arrest of another assemblyman, believed to have solicited and received RM150,000 in bribes in the same case. The second suspect, in his 40s and holding an assistant minister position, is also accused of offences spanning 2023 to 2024. The businessman was released on RM100,000 bail with two sureties, while the two assemblymen were granted RM50,000 bail each with one surety after their statements were recorded.

Protesters demand debt cancellation, climate action ahead of UN summit
Protesters demand debt cancellation, climate action ahead of UN summit

The Star

timean hour ago

  • The Star

Protesters demand debt cancellation, climate action ahead of UN summit

People take part in a march demanding a UN-led framework for sovereign debt resolution, on the eve of the 4th International Conference on Financing for Development, in Seville, Spain, June 29, 2025. REUTERS/Claudia Greco SEVILLE, Spain (Reuters) -Activists marched in blistering heat through southern Spain's Seville on Sunday, calling for debt cancellation, climate justice and taxing the super rich on the eve of a UN summit on financing development that critics say lacks ambition and scope. The four-day meeting - held once every decade - promises to take on poverty, disease and climate change by mapping out the global framework for development. But the United States' decision to pull out and wealthy countries' shrinking appetite for foreign aid have dampened hopes that the summit will bring about significant change. Greenpeace members carried a float depicting billionaire Elon Musk as a baby wielding a chainsaw, seated atop a terrestrial globe. Others held up banners reading "Make Human Rights Great Again", "Tax justice now" or "Make polluters pay". Beauty Narteh of Ghana's Anti-Corruption Coalition said her group wanted a fairer tax system and "dignity, not handouts". Sokhna Ndiaye, of the Africa Development Interchange Network, called on the public and private sectors to be "less selfish and show more solidarity" with developing countries. Hours earlier, however, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said that "the very fact that this conference is happening while conflict is raging across the globe is a reason to be hopeful". Speaking at an event by non-profit Global Citizen, Sanchez reiterated Madrid's commitment to reach 0.7% of GDP in development aid and urged other countries to do the same. Jason Braganza, executive director of pan-African advocacy group AFRODAD who took part in the year-long negotiation on the conference's final outcome document, said countries including the U.S., the European Union and Britain had obstructed efforts to organise a UN convention on sovereign debt. "It's a shame these countries have opted to protect their own interests and those of creditors over lives that are being lost," he added. (Reporting by David Latona and Silvio Castellanos; Editing by Andrea Ricci)

AI could save up to US$70bil a year in disaster losses by 2050: Deloitte
AI could save up to US$70bil a year in disaster losses by 2050: Deloitte

New Straits Times

timean hour ago

  • New Straits Times

AI could save up to US$70bil a year in disaster losses by 2050: Deloitte

KUALA LUMPUR: Artificial intelligence (AI) has the potential to help global leaders build stronger, more resilient infrastructure to better anticipate, manage, and recover from increasingly frequent and severe natural disasters, potentially avoiding up to US$70 billion in annual infrastructure losses by 2050, according to a Deloitte report. The report estimates that average yearly losses from natural disasters could rise to between US$460 billion and over US$500 billion by 2050, with storms and floods making up the largest share of these losses. Deloitte said that embedding AI into infrastructure planning and operations can enhance prevention, detection, and response capabilities, allowing both public and private sector leaders to proactively manage and reduce disaster-related risks. "If deployed strategically, AI can help leaders identify risks sooner, optimise resources, prevent costly failures and disruption, and accelerate response and recovery times during natural disasters. Investing in both preventative and reactive AI-powered infrastructure solutions can help safeguard economic value and increase business resilience," said Jennifer Steinmann, Deloitte global sustainability business leader. Adopting AI technologies, from infrastructure planning through operations, can offer preventative, detective, and responsive solutions to help address natural disasters, providing private and public sector leaders options to proactively mitigate these risks. The benefits are significant. Deloitte Global's report found that AI can help prevent damages of US$30 billion on average per year from storms alone globally by 2050. AI-powered detection and reaction systems, like early warning systems, can reduce risks from wildfires and floods. For example, early bushfire detection can help mitigate losses of between US$100 million and US$300 million annually in Australia, depending on detection and reaction times. Deloitte said although AI offers significant potential to boost the resilience of critical infrastructure, leaders must collaborate to overcome barriers to adoption, including outdated infrastructure, regulatory shortcomings, and financial limitations. Coordinating among stakeholders worldwide to develop AI tools that complement other resilience measures is crucial for driving innovation and building a more robust future, said Costi Perricos, Deloitte's global generative AI business leader. "With broader adoption and improved AI capabilities, projected annual savings in direct disaster costs by 2050 could reach as much as US$115 billion, potentially eliminating nearly one-third of disaster-related losses. "This research demonstrates the clear economic, environmental, and societal value AI can provide, and leaders should take action to help ensure minimal disruption."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store