But such regulation should also "preserve an open and
enabling environment" for the development of AI technologies and be based
on democratic values, G7 ministers said in a joint statement issued at the end
of a two-day meeting in Japan.
While the ministers recognised that "policy instruments
to achieve the common vision and goal of trustworthy AI may vary across G7
members", the agreement sets a landmark for how major countries govern AI
amid privacy concerns and security risks.
"The conclusions of this G7 meeting show that we are
definitely not alone in this," European Commission Executive Vice
President Margrethe Vestager told Reuters ahead of the agreement.
Governments have especially paid attention to the popularity
of generative AI tools such as ChatGPT, a chatbot developed by Microsoft-backed
OpenAI that has become the fastest-growing app in history since its November
launch.
"We plan to convene future G7 discussions on generative
AI which could include topics such as governance, how to safeguard intellectual
property rights including copyright, promote transparency, address
disinformation" including information manipulation by foreign forces, the
ministerial statement said.
Italy, a G7 member, took ChatGPT offline last month to investigate
its potential breach of personal data rules. While Italy lifted the ban on
Friday, the move has inspired fellow European privacy regulators to launch
probes.
EU lawmakers on Thursday reached a preliminary agreement on
a new draft of its upcoming AI Act, including copyright protection measures for
generative AI, following a call for world leaders to convene a summit to
control such technology.
Vestager, EU's tech regulation chief, said the bloc
"will have the political agreement this year" on the AI legislation,
such as labeling obligations for AI-generated images or music, to address
copyright and educational risks.
Japan, this year's chair of G7, meanwhile, has taken an
accommodative approach to AI developers, pledging support for public and industrial
adoption of AI.
Japan hoped to get the G7 "to agree on agile or
flexible governance, rather than preemptive, catch-all regulation" over AI
technology, industry minister Yasutoshi Nishimura said on Friday ahead of the
ministerial talks.
"Pausing (AI development) is not the right response -
innovation should keep developing but within certain guardrails that
democracies have to set," Jean-Noel Barrot, French Minister for Digital
Transition, told Reuters, adding France will provide some exceptions to small
AI developers under the upcoming EU regulation.
Besides intellectual property concerns, G7 countries
recognised security risks. "Generative AI...produces fake news and
disruptive solutions to the society if the data it's based on is fake,"
Japanese digital minister Taro Kono told a press conference after the
agreement.
The top tech officials from G7 - Britain, Canada, the EU,
France, Germany, Italy, Japan, and the United States - met in Takasaki, a city
about 100 km (60 miles) northwest of Tokyo, following energy and foreign
ministers' meetings this month.
Japan will host the G7 Summit in Hiroshima in late May, where Prime Minister Fumio Kishida will discuss AI rules with world leaders. © Reuters