It’s a past break.
In May 2023, Japan’s Hiroshima conference, G7 leaders signed a statement promoting the so-called Hiroshima AI process to promote safe and reliable AI, explicitly recognizing the “need to manage risks” and “keeping humanity at the centre.”
It comes with a voluntary code of conduct for companies developing the most advanced AI models. That code of conduct was named only once in the current G7 draft.
The focus of safety at the time continued to be the popularity of the generator AI overnight thanks to Openai’s ChatGPT.
In the meantime, however, attention shifted from safety to winning the AI race.
In January, US President Donald Trump rescinded an executive order from the Biden era, which aimed at developing “safe, safe and reliable” AI in a rare EU victory.