From Turing to Tomorrow: The UK's Approach to AI Regulation
Oliver Ritchie, Markus Anderljung, Tom Rachman

TL;DR
The paper examines the UK's distinctive, evolving approach to AI regulation, highlighting its strategies, challenges, and proposals to balance innovation with risk mitigation in a rapidly advancing AI landscape.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of the UK's AI regulation history, current policies, and offers concrete recommendations for future regulatory frameworks and technical research needs.
Findings
UK adopted a pro-innovation, light-touch regulatory approach
Establishment of AI Safety Institute and international safety efforts
Recommendations for flexible, principles-based regulation and legal updates
Abstract
The UK has pursued a distinctive path in AI regulation: less cautious than the EU but more willing to address risks than the US, and has emerged as a global leader in coordinating AI safety efforts. Impressive developments from companies like London-based DeepMind began to spark concerns in the UK about catastrophic risks from around 2012, although regulatory discussion at the time focussed on bias and discrimination. By 2022, these discussions had evolved into a "pro-innovation" strategy, in which the government directed existing regulators to take a light-touch approach, governing AI at point of use, but avoided regulating the technology or infrastructure directly. ChatGPT arrived in late 2022, galvanising concerns that this approach may be insufficient. The UK responded by establishing an AI Safety Institute to monitor risks and hosting the first international AI Safety Summit in…
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