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Rajeev Chandrasekhar, Minister of State for Electronic and Information Technology of India, posted on X, that he bumped into Elon Musk at the AI Safety Summit at Bletchley Park in UK.
In the post, Chandrasekhar wrote that Musk’s son with Shivon has the same middle name “Chandrasekhar”, which is after the 1983 Nobel physicist professor S Chandrasekhar.
Rajeev Chandrasekhar is representing India at this two-day summit, where the £80 million ($100 million) funding initiative is a collaborative effort between Britain, Canada, and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. The objective is to promote “safe and responsible” programming. The UK’s AI for Development Programme will contribute £38 million to this collaboration, demonstrating the UK’s commitment to investing in partnerships that leverage cutting-edge technology to address global challenges.
Chandrasekhar emphasised India’s significant progress in digitising its economy over the past eight years. During the global AI summit hosted by Britain, he stated, “India has rapidly digitised its economy in the last eight years, moving from about 4.5 percent of the total GDP to a target of 20 percent by 2025-26. Presently, we are at about 11 percent, but the digital and innovation economies are growing 2.5 to 3 times faster than the non-digital part of the GDP.”
Chandrasekhar further conveyed Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s vision for a collaborative approach to shaping the future of technology and innovation, emphasising that the institutional framework should be sustained, strategic, and involve multiple nations, rather than just one or two countries. He underlined the vital role of artificial intelligence as a catalyst for the burgeoning digital economy, growth, and governance.
The summit brought together international digital ministers, technology sector leaders, top academics, and civil society representatives to discuss shared risks associated with emerging AI technology and potential mitigations.
Chandrasekhar highlighted the Indian government’s commitment to international collaboration, stating, “International conversations between countries, such as this Global AI summit, are extremely important as we shape the future of technology, especially in a year where technology presents unprecedented opportunities in the history of mankind.”
At Day 2 of the summit, Chandrasekhar spoke at Ministerial round table with discussions on fostering collaboration and understanding the risks of frontier AI models. He emphasised AI’s potential as a growth enabler for digital and innovation economies and urged a global, all-government approach to shape AI safety regulations.
Key questions and solutions were presented, stressing the urgency to move from abstract concepts to granular developments in the global safety and trust regulatory framework.