Trump, DeepSeek in focus as nations gather at Paris AI Summit
The DeepSeek app is seen in this illustration taken on January 29, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration//File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights
All eyes are on the French capital next week to see if U.S. President Donald Trumpâs administration can find common ground with China and nearly 100 other nations on the safe development of artificial intelligence.
About a year after world powers reckoned with the dangers of AI in Englandâs Bletchley Park, a wider array of countries are gathering in Paris to discuss putting the technology to work.
France, eager to promote its national industry, is hosting the AI Action Summit alongside India on Feb. 10 and 11, with a focus on areas where Europeâs second-largest economy has an advantage: freely available or âopen-sourceâ systems, and clean energy to power data centers.
and one itâs unlikely to reach without major progress on new fuel technologies or without new thinking on new design.
Mitigating labor disruption and promoting sovereignty in a global AI market are also on the agenda.
Top executives from Alphabet (GOOGL.O), Microsoft (MSFT.O), and dozens of other businesses are slated to attend. Government leaders are expected to dine on Monday with select CEOs. And talks will include one on Tuesday by Sam Altman, chief executive of OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT, two people involved in the summit told Reuters.
It was less clear whether the U.S. will reach consensus with other nations on AI.
Since taking office on Jan. 20, President Trump has revoked former President Joe Bidenâs 2023 executive order on the technology, set in motion a repeat withdrawal from the Paris Climate Agreement and faced Congressional calls to consider new export controls on AI chips to counter rival China.
U.S. Vice President JD Vance will attend for the American delegation.
A non-binding communiqué of principles for the stewardship of AI, bearing U.S., Chinese and other signatures, has been under negotiation and would mark a big achievement if reached, said the people involved in the summit, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
They declined to detail the communiqué or elaborate if there were any points of disagreement among the would-be signatories.
The White House did not respond to a request for comment.
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An official for the French presidency said the summit will give voice to countries around the world, not only the U.S. and China.
âWe are showing that AI is here, that companies must adopt it, that it is a vector of competitiveness for France and for Europe,â the ĂlysĂ©e official said.
NO NEW AI REGULATION
Safety commitments dominated the conversation in prior global AI summits in Bletchley Park and Seoul. In Paris, creating new regulation is not on the agenda.
Reeling from red tape and a reputation for risk aversion, Europe and particularly France are eager to discuss frameworks for AI policy but not rules that could slow down their national champions, which have lagged American companies. Countries like France are evaluating how to implement the EU AI Act in as flexible a way as possible so it does not discourage innovation, the people involved in the summit said.
Instead in focus is how to distribute AIâs benefits to developing nations, via cheaper models made by the likes of Franceâs startup Mistral and Chinaâs DeepSeek. The Hangzhou-based company rocked global markets last month by showing it could vie with U.S. heavyweights on human-like reasoning technology, while charging much less.
France has seized on the development as evidence that the global race to more powerful AI remains wide open.
One of the summitâs likely outcomes is that philanthropies and businesses are expected to commit an initial $500 million in capital, going up to $2.5 billion over five years, to fund public-interest projects on AI around the world, the people said.
Another is addressing the energy crunch that industry thinks is inevitable from their power-hungry AI models. A major producer of clean energy in the form of nuclear power, France wants to reconcile the worldâs climate and AI ambitions.
Franceâs decarbonized energy and ânuclear fleet, in the context of data center installations, is an asset,â the ĂlysĂ©e official said. âWe will most likely have announcements in this regard at the summit.â
Source: www.reuters.com
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