
Human control in AI race
His remarks came just days after US President Donald Trump unveiled an aggressive low-regulation strategy aimed at cementing US dominance in the fast-moving field, promising to 'remove red tape and onerous regulation' that could hinder private sector AI development.
Opening the World AI Conference (WAIC) in Shanghai, Li emphasised the need for governance and open-source development, announcing the establishment of a Chinese-led body for international AI cooperation.
'The risks and challenges brought by artificial intelligence have drawn widespread attention... How to find a balance between development and security urgently requires further consensus from the entire society,' the premier said yesterday.
Li said China would 'actively promote' the development of open-source AI, adding Beijing was willing to share advances with other countries, particularly developing ones.
'If we engage in technological monopolies, controls and blockage, artificial intelligence will become the preserve of a few countries and a few enterprises,' he said.
'Only by adhering to openness, sharing and fairness in access to intelligence can more countries and groups benefit from (AI).'
The premier highlighted 'insufficient supply of computing power and chips' as a bottleneck.
Washington has expanded its efforts in recent years to curb exports of state-of-the-art chips to China, concerned that these can be used to advance Beijing's military systems and erode US tech dominance.
For its part, China has made AI a pillar of its plans for technological self-reliance, with the government pledging a raft of measures to boost the sector.
In January, Chinese startup DeepSeek unveiled an AI model that performed as well as top US systems despite using less powerful chips.
At a time when AI is being integrated across virtually all industries, its uses have raised major ethical questions, from the spread of misinformation to its impact on employment, or the potential loss of technological control.
In a speech at WAIC yesterday, Nobel Prize-winning physicist Geoffrey Hinton compared the situation to keeping 'a very cute tiger cub as a pet'.
'To survive', he said, you need to ensure you can train it not to kill you when it grows up. — AFP
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