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Jonathan Martin Headlines 2024 Election Preview Breakfast for Washington Women Technology Network

February 28, 2024 By WHC Insider

POLITICO’s Jonathan Martin (center) with Jessica Nigro, VP of External Affairs for Lucid Motors (left), and Tammy Haddad, CEO of Haddad Media, in front of the new Lucid Air.

On Tuesday, the Washington Women Technology Network (WWTN) brought together two dozen stakeholders from government, media, and policy for a 2024 election preview with POLITICO’s senior political columnist Jonathan Martin. Jessica Nigro, Lucid Motors’ vice president of external affairs, and WWTN and Washington AI Network founder Tammy Haddad co-hosted the breakfast at the House at 1229. 

LtoR: Political strategist Adrienne Elrod, featured guest Jonathan Martin, co-host Jessica Nigro, Maryam Mujica of Booking Holdings, and BBC presenter Sami Somaskanda.

Martin writes in his most recent column that—in the 2024 election cycle—”cold, unchanging math is the determinative factor, not the old standbys.” This theme coursed through the breakfast as Martin shared observations from the campaign trail and South Carolina’s GOP primary, where Donald Trump beat the state’s former governor Nikki Haley by 20 points.  

Jonathan Martin (right) congratulates Deesha Dyer (center) on her upcoming new book as Crystal Carson (center left) and Kathy O’Hearn (far left) applaud.

Following the discussion, guests were treated to ride-and-drives around Dupont Circle in a pair of Lucid Motors’ award-winning EV—the Lucid Air—which can travel over 500 miles on a single charge.

Guests included Senator Mark Warner’s chief of staff, Elizabeth Falcone, British Embassy political director Senay Bulbul, YouTube’s Alexandra Veitch, Maryam Mujica from Booking Holdings, political strategiest Adrienne Elrod, president of Hook & Fasten Consulting and former White House social secretary Deesha Dyer, Michelle Obama’s communications director Crystal Carson, GlobalWIN founder Helen Milby, Washington Post chief communications office Kathy Baird; BBC Washington presenter Sumi Somaskanda; Washington Post Live executive producer Kathy O’Hearn, Shaniqua McClendon from Crooked Media, Invariant’s Kris Coratti, Nkechi Nneji from Meta, Jessica Sarhan of Bloomberg News, Lyft’s Heather Foster , Aspen Strategy Group director Niamh King, and Amanda Anderson from Block.

View photos here.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Haippy Hour Welcomes NAIAC Members to Washington

February 22, 2024 By WHC Insider

NAIAC chair and Equal AI CEO Miriam Vogel, U.S. AI Safety Institute CTO Elham Tabassi, and Washington AI Network founder Tammy Haddad.

Leading experts in artificial intelligence convened in Washington this week for a meeting of the National Artificial Intelligence Advisory Committee (NAIAC). Following the committee’s Wednesday gathering, NAIAC chair and Equal AI CEO Miriam Vogel, Washington AI Network founder Tammy Haddad, and General Catalyst advisor Teresa Carlson co-hosted a Haippy Hour for NAIAC members and AI friends at the House at 1229. 

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Dmitri Alperovitch, author of “World on the Brink”; General Catalyst advisor Teresa Carlson, and Arun Gupta, author of “Venture Meets Mission.”

Vogel, Carlson, and Haddad welcomed guests and congratulated Elham Tabassi, the chief AI advisor for NIST, on her new role as chief technology officer of the U.S. AI Safety Institute. 

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The French Embassy’s Alexandre Mirlesse, NAIAC member and IBM’s chief privacy officer Christina Montgomery and NAIAC ember and Miami’s Assistant Chief of Police Armando Aguilar.

NAIAC members in attendance were Miami’s Assistant Chief of Police Armando Aguilar; NVIDIA’s Vice President and head of worldwide AI Keith Strier; Anthony Bak from Palantir; Professor Jane Bambauer of the University of Florida School of Law; Professor David Danks of UC San Diego; Professor Jennifer Eberhardt of Stanford University; Professor Jon Kleinberg of Cornell University; Professor Fred Oswald of Rice University; Reggie Townsend, vice president of data ethics at SAS; Trooper Sanders, CEO of Benefits Data Trust; Haniyeh Mahmoudian, Global AI Ethicist, DataRobot, Inc.; Benji Hutchinson, chief revenue officer, Rank One Computing; Janet Haven from the Data & Society Research Institute; Christina Montgomery, chief privacy and trust officer at IBM; Victoria Espinel, president and CEO of BSA | The Software Alliance; and the EU’s tech policy advisor Deniz Houston.

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Reggie Townsend and Gaurav Pal

Guests included Senator Chuck Schumer’s policy director Jon Cardinal and AI Lead Tim Ryder; Senator Mitt Romney’s chief of staff Liz Johnson; Senator Mark Warner’s chief of staff Elizabeth Falcone; Bryan Doyle, senior advisor to Rep. Dean Phillips; Silverado Policy Accelerator’s executive chairman Dmitri Alperovitch, author of the new book “World on the Brink”; Silverado’s chair and co-founder Maureen Hinman; Tara Rigler and Hina Gir from the Special Competitive Studies Project (SCSP); the French Embassy’s AI lead Alexandre Mirlesse; Julian Ramirez, the digital advisor at the German Embassy; Varun Krovi from the Center for AI Safety Action Fund; SKDK’s Mariel Saez; and Arun Gupta, founder of the NobleReach Foundation and author of “Venture Meets Mission.” 

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Julian Ramirez, Anthony Bak, and Victoria Virasingh

Filed Under: Washington AI Network

SNL’s Colin Jost to Host 2024 WHCA Dinner

February 12, 2024 By WHC Insider

SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE — Pictured: Colin Jost — (Photo by: Dana Edelson/NBC)

The White House Correspondents’ Association (WHCA) announced on Friday that Saturday Night Live’s Colin Jost is the featured entertainer for the 2024 White House Correspondents’ Association dinner on Saturday, April 27 in Washington, D.C. 

“Colin Jost knows how to make Saturday nights funny, and I am thrilled Colin will be live from the nation’s capital as the headline entertainer for this year’s White House Correspondents’ Dinner,” WHCA President Kelly O’Donnell, NBC News’s senior White House correspondent, said in a statement.

The annual dinner honoring journalism will be a homecoming of sorts for Jost. A one time journalist, he wrote for the Harvard Crimson and the Staten Island Advance before pursuing a career in entertainment.

With a potential presidential election rematch looming ahead, Jost is no stranger to political comedy. He has written for Saturday Night Live since 2005 and has co-anchored the show’s “Weekend Update” since 2014, collecting numerous awards along the way, including five Writers Guild Awards, two Peabody Awards and 14 Emmy nominations for his writing on SNL. 

The black-tie event is known to be a tough crowd for any comedian, tasked with entertaining a room loaded with journalists, celebrities, and lawmakers. The President and First Lady traditionally attend the dinner as well. 

This year’s annual WHCA dinner will take place at its longtime home in the ballroom of the Washington Hilton and proceeds from the night will go toward scholarships for journalism students.

About the WHCA

Founded in 1914, the White House Correspondents’ Association exists to promote excellence in journalism as well as journalism education, and to ensure robust news coverage of the president and the presidency. We support awards for some of the best political reporting of the past year, and scholarships for young reporters who carry our hopes for vibrant journalism in the years to come. Each day, we work to ensure that the men and women who cover the White House have the ability to seek answers from powerful officials, up to and including the President. Our association comprises hundreds of members from the worlds of print, television, radio and online journalism. Their work, for outlets based in the United States and overseas, reaches a global audience. The association has been holding an annual dinner since 1921. 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Arun Gupta Calls for Younger, “Mission-Driven” Talent in Government

January 16, 2024 By WHC Insider

In a new episode of the Washington AI Network Podcast, host Tammy Haddad interviewed Arun Gupta, a veteran DC venture capitalist, and co-author of “Venture Meets Mission: Aligning People, Purpose, and Profit to Innovate and Transform Society.” 

Gupta is also CEO of the NobleReach Foundation, which brings together top talent from various sectors to drive advancements in emerging technologies and scientific innovations. 

The interview touched upon critical aspects of AI policy, the need for talent infusion in government, the vast data reservoirs held by government agencies, and the transformative potential of AI in sectors like education, healthcare, and agriculture.

Gupta expressed skepticism about the idea of a single federal agency overseeing AI deployment, emphasizing the necessity for AI to be integrated across all government agencies rather than centralizing responsibility. He underscored the challenge of infiltrating talent into these agencies, emphasizing the importance of bringing in younger, mission-driven individuals. Gupta argued that talent is the linchpin for effective policymaking, stating, “Having folks develop policy that don’t really understand the implications of the technology that they’re trying to regulate … has its own unintended consequences.” He believes talent “is the most important piece right now that we could be getting in government.”

Gupta acknowledged the private sector’s lead in AI technology development but emphasized the government’s unique role in tackling significant problems.

In response to President Biden’s executive order mandating AI experts in every government agency, Gupta proposed an infusion of talented, mission-driven young people just finishing school. He argued that relying solely on older, “experienced” individuals might be challenging. Gupta noted that young people are “more mission-driven.” 

“If you can show them the impact that they’re having” then the talent pool will grow, he said. 

While highlighting the government role in the development of AI, Gupta poses the question, “is it AI to optimize ads or is it AI to save lives?”  Gupta believes that “government can provide that platform to do the latter in a much more meaningful and scalable way.”

Gupta also detailed NobleReach’s initiatives, focusing on both innovation and talent. The foundation collaborates with organizations like DARPA and NSF to commercialize research for solving societal problems. On the talent side, NobleReach aims to rebuild the infrastructure by attracting first-career talent, akin to a Teach for America model, to contribute to government initiatives.

When asked about the recent shakeup at OpenAI, Gupta called it “a governance story.” 

“OpenAI started as a not-for-profit. And a not-for-profit has a different mandate. Right? And the mandate of the board was around ethical AI,” he said. “And then they created a subsidiary … And that subsidiary had a more for-profit motive. Which is fine too. And at some point, unless you create a separate board, you have conflicting goals …. So I don’t think anything, anyone was actually wrong in this process.”

Filed Under: Washington AI Network

“Remember the First Ladies” Book Party Honors Author Anita McBride

December 13, 2023 By WHC Insider

Anita McBride and Cafe Milano owner Franco Nuschese

Anita McBride, former chief of staff to First Lady Laura Bush and co-author of the forthcoming book “Remember the First Ladies: The Legacies of America’s History-Making Women,” was fêted at a book party and luncheon hosted by Franco Nuschese at Cafe Milano on December 13.

The gathering was marked by a toast from Nuschese to McBride, celebrating their decades-long friendship, their shared Italian heritage, and her contributions to the field of politics.

Anita McBride and Carla Hayden, Librarian of Congress

During the lunch, Haddad Media CEO Tammy Haddad interviewed the guest of honor, prying her for insights and interesting facts about first ladies, and engaging the audience in a game-style Q&A. “When was the term ‘first lady’ first used?” asked Haddad. The question stumped the crowd but McBride, of course, had the answer: “At Dolley Madison’s funeral in 1849, President Zachary Taylor called her ‘the first lady of the land’ and the term stuck.”

At the end of the conversation, attendees raised a glass to former First Lady Rosalynn Carter, who passed away in November at the age of 96.

Anita McBride and Tammy Haddad toast the late Rosalynn Carter

Guests included Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden; former Secretary of Transportation and Labor Elizabeth Dole; Irish Ambassador Geraldine Byrne Nason; Rep. Debbie Dingell; CBS Evening News anchor Norah O’Donnell; Stewart McLaurin, president of the White House Historical Association; Susan Page, Washington bureau chief for USA Today; jewelry designer Ann Hand, whose creations were famously worn by Hillary Clinton; Patricia Harrison, CEO of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting; Camille Johnston, former communications director to First Lady Michelle Obama; former U.S Chief of Protocol Capricia Marshall and many other distinguished figures from media, politics, and diplomacy.

Elizabeth Dole, Former Secretary of Labor and Transportation, Anita McBride and CBS Evening News anchor Norah O’Donnell

McBride is currently an executive-in-residence at American University, where she directs the First Ladies Initiative. She is also co-author of the first-ever textbook on the role of the first lady – “U.S. First Ladies: Making History and Leaving Legacies.”

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Anita McBride, Cafe Milano, First Ladies, Franco Nuschese, Remember the First Ladies, Tammy Haddad

Vice Admiral Frank Whitworth speaks at Washington AI Network to highlight AI’s role in National Security, Intelligence, and Warfare

December 7, 2023 By WHC Insider

VADM Frank Whitworth addresses the crowd at the Washington AI Network on Monday, December 4, 2023.
VADM Frank Whitworth speaks at the Washington AI Network on Monday, December 4, 2023.
VADM Frank Whitworth and Washington AI Network founder Tammy Haddad.

The Washington AI Network welcomed Vice Admiral Frank Whitworth, Director of the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency(NGA), and guests to the House at 1229 on Monday, December 4 for a special ‘cocktails and conversation’ on AI’s role in national security, intelligence, competition with China, AI’s use in warfare, and the promise of advanced AI models that can analyze visual data.

VADM Whitworth shared his insights on the complex and evolving role of AI in geospatial intelligence and national security, as well as the challenges and opportunities it presents. The conversation was released today as an episode of the Washington AI Network Podcast

Moderated by host and founder Tammy Haddad, the conversation touched on the NGA’s responsibilities in the visual domain of intelligence, the critical role of human expertise or “wetware” in training AI algorithms, and the promise of large visual models, inter-agency cooperation, ethical considerations and guardrails, AI use in warfare, including in the Ukraine conflict, and competition with China.

Bob Woodward asks VADM Frank Whitworth a question from the front row.
Bob Woodward and VADM Frank Whitworth.

Guests spotted in POLITICO Playbook:  Bob Woodward, Bob Costa, Phil Rucker, Josh Dawsey, Canadian Ambassador Kirsten Hillman, Elizabeth Falcone, Machalagh Carr, Teresa Carlson, Steve Clemons, John Hudson, James Adams, Evan Hollander and Eli Yokley, Jackie Rooney, T.W. Arrighi, Kathy O’Hearn and Mike Sarchet, Don Kerr and Polson Kanneth.

Highlights of the conversation are below. Transcript here.

Vice Adm. Frank Whitworth on guardrails and how AI and machines should support humans in their jobs – not replace them:

“We do have our own guardrails established in the wetware application of our tradecraft. And it’s things like training ourselves against things like confirmation bias or taking liberties with a normal checklist approach to whether you are there in positive identification. But to riff on your question, and this is where AI, I totally agree with the need for guardrails, provided we’re tempted to cut corners with AI. And right now, as far as humans, at least the humans at NGA, we’re building a certification program to ensure that will never occur, that [it] will be ethical. But I love also flipping this argument to suggesting that AI can actually provide guardrails.” 

“Let’s say we had a pop-up urgent kind of episode, and we had people who have been working a long time, and they’re getting tired. That machine is not. So if that machine, during the course of the ML process, if we’ve treated that as a true digital apprentice, we’re going to count on that machine to double check if we’re getting tired, or if we might actually have a little bit of bias built in that we didn’t realize we did. I love the idea of AI actually being there to provide just another set of eyes as its own guardrail. This idea of singularity and letting the machine take over, those are human decisions. And so the way that we’re going to ensure that we approach this is very ethics bound, very certifications bound, totally in keeping with where DOD and the President now, by extension, with his executive order, 14110, we’re all in keeping with that.”

Vice Adm. Frank Whitworth on the anticipation of large visual models:

“In the visual sector for GEOINT, what I’m excited about, you’ve heard about these large language models. We anticipate, soon, large visual models. So instead of a visual detection that ‘This is a nice glass of water,’ it just tells you that it’s a glass of water. It might actually say, ‘Now it’s three fourths full.’ It will give you some context as to the behavior, or [that] it’s now moved about four inches to the right. That’ll be a phrase. So that’s kind of the equivalent in our world compared to what you’re seeing in such an exciting way with LLMs (large language models).”

Vice Adm. Frank Whitworth on competing with China:

“If I look at this from a STEM production rate and possible recruitment rate for people who are of Chinese origin, they’re way ahead. They are. The number of STEM-related graduates is probably over five times what we experience in the United States…This is concerning. We are a very STEM-oriented agency, and certainly people who understand AI and understand this tradecraft would probably benefit from being STEM graduates. What I like, though, about the United States is how experienced we are with critical thinking and with a tendency to tell the whole truth and nothing but the truth first, right up front. And this has been tested. I would tell you as somebody who’s been invested in multiple conflicts over the last 34 years, we have a really good tendency to get the bad news up the chain very, very quickly. And so during the course of the fog of conflict, the fog of war, we’re going to opt to get that information up and seek clarity and to help our decision-makers also seek clarity and know, and know before they make decisions. I don’t know, and I can’t tell you whether the Chinese actually have that advantage right now.”

Vice Adm. Frank Whitworth on combating AI-generated deep fakes and visual misinformation:

“The issue of validation is very important. I appreciate your asking that. So one of the things that we do have is a group of people dedicated to open source imagery. And there’s a lot of it out there. And as you know, an image can be very powerful. Especially if it’s misleading and, and the consumer doesn’t realize that. So what we do is we go through, and it’s typically from social media. It might be through press. But typically the stuff you want to double-check is that stuff that comes through unevaluated press or some social media that may not be as reputable. But if it’s really important, then we will actually put that product out with a validation index. So we’re looking for other indications of maybe some manipulation, some forensics in there. We’re looking for evidence on the ground that’s not quite right relative to what we know is on the ground. And I tasked them about a year ago, this team, I said, ‘Hey, don’t just put it out as a little product. Put a scale on there.” One, invalid. Absolutely not. We’re finding things inconsistent with reality, inconsistent with the truth. Five, valid. Everything seems to be checking. I have found that our consumers have really enjoyed at least having a hint of whether that’s something that is correct or not.”

Vice Adm. Frank Whitworth on humans, AI, and warfare:

“I don’t have any guidance to take a human out of the loop, or right now, I think ‘on the loop’ is a term that’s being used. But I take your point that there could be some forces out there that choose to take humans out of the loop with mission orders, autonomous kind of mission orders with vehicles. So, here’s where I am. And this kind of speaks to what I’ve termed as a reluctant RMA, a Revolution of Military Affairs, that deals with the unmanning of a lot of power projection. Not all of it, mind you, but a lot of it. And we, it’s reluctant because frankly, we’re really invested in those as humans in minimizing warfare. But if you got to go for some sort of warfare, we are really invested in doing it best as humans. And we are invested in being out there.

Vice Adm. Frank Whitworth on the role of AI (and U.S. help) in the Ukraine conflict:

“I can’t speak to whether the Ukrainians are independently applying AI. They’re very resourceful. They’re very IT savvy. Would not be surprised to find out that they are. I think we’ve got one or two reporters who are just there, and they could probably have more authority on that topic. I do know this. If there is a way to provide an advantage to the Ukrainians, that is our writ. That is what we do. Through Ucomm, we are providing a tremendous amount of information to ensure that they have what they need. We don’t do the targeting for them. They make their own independent assessments. They make their own independent decisions on what they will actually neutralize. But we have a responsibility, as the president has stated from the beginning of this, to ensure that, that we’re not holding back in, in the information that they need to make good decisions.”

Vice Adm. Frank Whitworth on MAVEN Smart System:

“And I like the direction that we’re moving in the MAVEN program to ensure that we are soliciting as many opportunities out there by smalls as we can. Now, that will have to be tempered by some security issues. We’ll have to make sure that as we protect these algorithms, that we don’t get too far afield. We don’t want to go back to being just a project that’s so flat and apparent that, frankly, you find your algorithms getting stolen.”

Share on social media using @WashingtonAINet and @NGA_GEOINT.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: AI, Artificial Intelligence, NGA, Pentagon, Washington AI Network

Washington AI Network and General Catalyst host ‘cocktails and conversation’ on investing in global resilience

November 10, 2023 By WHC Insider

The Washington AI Network and General Catalyst co-hosted an evening of cocktails and conversation on Thursday, November 9 at the House of 1229. The event brought together a diverse group of attendees, spanning the intelligence community, government representatives, the defense industry, and technology innovators for an insightful discussion on investing in global resilience.

The evening commenced with an engaging discussion on responsible innovation featuring Washington AI Network founder Tammy Haddad, along with Paul Kwan, General Catalyst’s managing director, and Teresa Carlton, a new Catalyst advisor for General Catalyst. 

A second panel featured George Barnes, former Deputy Director of the National Security Agency and partner at Red Cell Partners, alongside Matt Steckman, Anduril’s chief revenue officer, and Cameron McCord, co-founder and CEO of Nominal.

Guests included Kara Swisher, Sec. Elaine Chao, Dorothy McAuliffe, Sue Gordon, White House Deputy Assistant to the President and Senior Advisor for Political Engagement John McCarthy, CISA director Jen Easterly, Lt. Gen. Scott Howell (ret.), Daniel Koh and Amy Sennett, British DCM James Roscoe, Elizabeth Falcone, Michael Allen, and CNN’s David Urban. 

Filed Under: General Catalyst, Global Resilience, Washington AI Network, Washington Events Tagged With: DC, News

Washington Attracts Unique Fashion & Artisan Designers for Exclusive Unveiling

November 6, 2023 By WHC Insider

Mi Jong Lee Fashion Designer, Event Organizer Ida Abdalkhani (Wearing Mi Jong Lee Fall 2023 Line & To-be-available-soon Sheron Barber Diamond Bag), Sheron Barber Leather Artisan, Photo Credit: Ben Droz Photography

On September 14, designers Mi Jong Lee, Sheron Barber and their teams traveled to Washington D.C. for an exclusive fashion event. Distinguished guests across business, government, nonprofit, fashion and media came from around the U.S. and abroad to attend the invitation-only event and unveiling of Lee’s fall collection and Barber’s newest creation, the diamond bag.

Mi Jong Lee’s Team & Sheron Barber’s Leather Designs. Photo Credit: Ben Droz Photography

Both designers spoke about their unique journeys, bringing them from unlikely backgrounds and challenges to great success in the fashion world. Wine was provided by minority-owned Michael LaVelle Wines and bites from women-owned Centrolina.

Lee shared her Fall 2023 collection and announced her plans to expand her New York City atelier to a full design-to-production studio in the coming months. Barber created and unveiled an exclusive “Hathaway” handbag, named after Theodore Roosevelt’s wife, to meet the needs of the multi- faceted leader. He also shared his never-before-seen diamond bag, which will be available for purchase to the public beginning mid-November.

We look forward to more inspiring designers bringing their fashion-forward creativity to the area!

Filed Under: Fashion, Uncategorized, Washington Tagged With: Abdalkhani, Artisans, Designers, Fashion, Ida, Mi Jong Lee, Sheron Barber

Lafayette 148 NY Holiday Gathering in Support of American University’s Women & Politics Institute

November 3, 2023 By WHC Insider

Betsy Fischer Martin, executive director of AU’s Women & Politics Institute, and Meta’s Nkechi Nneji

On the evening of Thursday, November 4th, Lafayette 148 NY at Tysons Galleria hosted a festive evening of shopping, cocktails and conversation  in support of the important work of American University’s Women & Politics Institute.  

Guests shopping at Lafayette 148 NY in support of the Women & Politics Institute

AU’s Women & Politics Institute prepares and encourages women to become involved in the political process by offering training and research opportunities to understand the challenges and opportunities they have in the political arena. 

Axios DC’s Paige Hopkins, CNN’s Eva McKend, event co-host Yamiche Alcindor of NBC News, and Meta’s Nkechi Nneji

Hosts for the evening included Executive Director, Women & Politics Institute and Executive in Residence at American University and former NBC “Meet the Press” Executive Producer Betsy Fischer Martin, Director of the First Ladies Initiative at American University, School of Public Affairs Anita McBride, Haddad Media and Washington AI Network’s Tammy Haddad, Chevron’s Vice President and General Manager of Government Affairs Karen Knutson and new mother NBC Washington Correspondent Yamiche Alcindor.

Guests included: Hilary Rosen, Sara Fagen, Julie Tsirkin, Eva McKend, Robyn Bash, Sydney Harvey, Ann Klenk, Nkechi Nneji, Annie Linskey, Maggie O’Neill, Paige Hopkins and Daisy Buenrostro-Avila.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Paul Rennie OBE previews the UK’s first global ‘AI Safety Summit’ on the Washington AI Network Podcast

October 30, 2023 By WHC Insider

A Preview of the British Prime Minister’s First-Ever Artificial Intelligence Safety Summit with Paul Rennie OBE, Head of the Global Economy Group at the UK Embassy

“The job we are having here is not to set some kind of ceiling; it is to try and set a common understanding of a floor,” says Rennie

“The Prime Minister’s committed £100,000,000 (one hundred million pounds) to our Frontier Model Task Force, which is bringing together some of the best minds in the world to look at this problem.”

The British Embassy’s Paul Rennie OBE and Washington AI Network founder Tammy Haddad

Washington, DC – In a new episode of the Washington AI Network podcast, host Tammy Haddad speaks with Paul Rennie OBE, Head of the Global Economy Group at the UK Embassy, about the British Prime Minister’s upcoming Artificial Intelligence Safety Summit scheduled for November 1 and 2. Rennie leads the UK’s climate and energy, economic security and trade, and science and technology networks across the United States.

UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak ahead of the first-ever AI Safety Summit on Nov. 1-2 at Bletchley Park, Buckinghamshire (Photo Credit: Peter Nicholls/Pool via AP)

Highlights of the interview are below:

Paul Rennie on the UK’s goals for the summit:

“This summit is both part of the wider international picture, as it is much a waypoint to the future conversations we will need to have about AI. And right now we have focused on AI safety because that is the first block in the puzzle, but after this, talking about AI for good and how we expand it will become so much more important.”

Paul Rennie on collaboration between government and the private sector:

“This is not a case of governments going away in a box and coming up with their plans. It has to be in collaboration with the companies themselves. It has to be in collaboration with the academics.” We need to understand how these models work. The companies themselves don’t fully understand how the models work.”

Paul Rennie on misinformation in elections:

“People have been trying to influence elections since the first time I’m sure we had elections. You know, there are all kinds of very interesting ways to support and corrupt and so on. I think the difference now is with the generative AI, or the risk with generative AI, is that one person’s potential impact is now so much greater.”

Paul Rennie on the UK’s role in the global AI community:

“The UK has become the go-to destination for all the major AI companies looking at their European headquarters. The UK taking on this role, thinking about AI safety is both, I think, a reflection of not only our technology capability but also our very real interest in how do we make the AI work well for us.”

Full transcript here.

The Washington AI Network Podcast is hosted by media veteran and Washington AI Network founder Tammy Haddad and produced and recorded by Haddad Media.  It is available on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, and Audioboom). 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: AI, British Embassy, DC, News, Paul Rennie, Tammy Haddad, UK, Washington, Washington AI Network

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