June 7, 2025
Europe wants to embrace AI on the 2nd day of Paris Summit, while the global consensus is unclear

Europe wants to embrace AI on the 2nd day of Paris Summit, while the global consensus is unclear

By Jeffrey Dastin and Elizabeth Howcroftt

(Reuters) – World leaders gathered on Tuesday for the second day and the plenary session of the Parisian top about artificial intelligence, while the American willingness to sign up for an explanation for sustainable AI remained in question.

Hours after President Emmanuel Macron stated that France was in the AI ​​race and Europe was enthusiastic about business, were representatives of nearly 100 countries, including China, India and the US who were willing to meet and determine whether competing national interests could be able to be reconciled. The American vice -president JD Vance leads the American delegation.

Macron emphasized a difference on Monday evening. When it comes to electricity, France would not follow “exercise, baby, drill” approach, such as the American oil production policy, but instead, clean electricity is ticking so that companies can “plug, baby, plug” to meet AI’s vaartlijk Power needs, he said.

However, a subject of political coordination was that 2025 was not the year to regulate AI AEW. US President Donald Trump has torn his predecessor Joe Biden’s AI -Vangrails and Europe has taken note.

According to Macron, Ursula von der Leyen of the European Commission will announce a new AI strategy for the block on Tuesday that “will be a unique opportunity for Europe to accelerate, to simplify our regulations, to deepen the internal market and also invest in Computer capacities.

The German Chancellor Olaf Scholz had this message for guests during an AI Summit dinner on Monday: “I insist on European companies to bundle a strong joint effort for AI in Europe,” he said in prepared comments by Reuters.

Executives would collect for the working day of the event and Sam Altman from OpenAi was expected to tackle the top. A consortium led by Elon Musk said on Monday that it had offered $ 97.4 billion to buy the non -profit control that OpenAi has for sale.

It was unclear whether the US and other countries would embrace a draft top statement that was distributed on January 30 in which was called for an “inclusive approach” for AI that multi-stakeholder, based on human rights and the developing countries.

The concept statement, seen by Reuters, explained priorities that include “avoiding market concentration” and “making ai ai sustainable for people and the planet.”

Vance’s first international journey as the American vice -president could still take a different focus.

Vance said Breitbart News that he would use the opportunity to discuss the Russia-Ukraine war in order, among other things, reported the right-loving American media outlet. Reuters could not immediately verify the report.

(Reporting by Jeffrey Dastin and Elizabeth Howcroft in Paris and Andreas Rinke in Berlin; Edit by Rod Nickel)

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