George Osborne joins OpenAI: ex-chancellor adds tech post to his CV

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The former UK chancellor George Osborne is joining OpenAI to lead the ChatGPT developer’s relationships with governments around the world.He will head a division known internally as OpenAI for Countries, through which the San Francisco artificial intelligence startup works with governments on national-level AI rollouts.The former Conservative politician will add the role to his growing portfolio of positions which include: chair of the British Museum; adviser to the cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase; and host of a podcast with the former Labour minister Ed Balls.Osborne is moving on from his role as senior managing director at Evercore, which acquired the investment bank Robey Warshaw in July where he was partner, and will be based in London rather than Silicon Valley.His hiring by OpenAI is the latest sign the big US tech firms are becoming increasingly focused on boosting AI adoption by national governments.

Microsoft, Google and Palantir have all been pushing hard to provide AI services to the British government, where Osborne was in office from 2010 to 2016 alongside Nick Clegg, who spent seven years working for Mark Zuckerberg at Meta,Rishi Sunak, one of Osborne’s successors as chancellor, announced in October he was taking an advisory role with one of OpenAI’s main rivals, Anthropic,Other roles Osborne has held since leaving government have included being editor of the Evening Standard between 2017 and 2020, and adviser to the US private equity firm BlackRock,OpenAI’s national-level projects have included involvement in building major AI infrastructure in places such as Norway and the United Arab Emirates as part of a $500bn “Stargate” datacentre initiative,OpenAI already has a memorandum of understanding with the UK government “to establish strategic partnerships that accelerate AI-driven economic growth and deliver opportunities to materially improve people’s lives” and a deal with Estonia to give all pupils and teachers access to a version of ChatGPT.

Osborne will be expected to create new nation-level AI infrastructure partnerships and expand those already announced in Argentina, Australia, Germany and South Korea.In a statement marking his appointment, Osborne said he believed OpenAI, which has been valued at about $500bn, was “the most exciting and promising company in the world right now”.“In my conversations with Sam Altman, Brad Lightcap [OpenAI’s chief executive and chief operating officer] and other senior colleagues, it’s clear they are exceptionally impressive leaders and that they care very deeply about their mission to ensure the power of artificial intelligence is developed responsibly, and the benefits are felt by all,” he said.“That’s exactly what the OpenAI for Countries initiative intends to achieve, helping societies around the world share the opportunity this powerful technology brings.”OpenAI has been hit by recent controversies over the impact of its chatbots.

It is defending several lawsuits from the families of young people who took their own lives after interacting with ChatGPT,They include the family of Adam Raine, 16, who killed himself in April after what his family’s lawyer claimed was “months of encouragement from ChatGPT”,Chris Lehane, OpenAI’s chief global affairs officer, said Osborne’s appointment “reflects a shared belief that AI is becoming critical infrastructure – and early decisions about how it’s built, governed, and deployed will shape economics and geopolitics for years to come”,He added: “Whether the world builds on democratic AI rails led by nations with aligned values designed to put this technology into the hands of people so they can fully participate in the opportunities of the intelligence age or the People’s Republic of China-imposed autocratic AI rails that will be used to concentrate the technology in the hands of the few – and at the expense of the many – will define what kind of a world we live in,”
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Penitent Tice tussles with The Unbearable Lightness of His Being | John Crace

Call it a Christmas miracle. For this was the day when Richard Tice sent in his application to become a fully paid-up member of Woke. The day the Reform deputy leader tried to break free from his role as the perennial sidekick. An insignificant blot on the Nigel Farage landscape. When he tried to show he was able to think his own thoughts

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How far must UK go to fend off threat of foreign interference in its elections?

Russia has been attempting to meddle with western democracy for years, but successive governments led by Boris Johnson and others have insisted that the UK’s electoral system can withstand its influence.That argument was recently blown apart by the conviction of former Reform politician Nathan Gill, jailed for 10 years for accepting bribes to advance Russian arguments.And now Steve Reed, the cabinet minister responsible for elections, has admitted there are worries that the UK’s “firewall” against foreign interference may not be strong enough as he ordered an independent review.The decision is clearly partly motivated by the chance to score political points against Reform UK over its links to the Russian bribe case. And yet there is no doubting the reality of the threat, even if it has until recently been ignored

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Richard Tice refuses to condemn Reform mayoral candidate’s comments about David Lammy

Reform UK’s deputy leader has refused to condemn a mayoral candidate for the party who said David Lammy should “go home to the Caribbean”.Richard Tice said it was the role of the party to “challenge” the justice secretary. Answering questions after a press conference, he also refused to say whether he still thought the 25-plus former school contemporaries of Nigel Farage who have accused the Reform leader of racism and other offensive behaviour were making up their claims, calling it “old news”.Reform has repeatedly declined to condemn comments on X by Chris Parry, a retired naval rear admiral who has been picked to contest the now-postponed Hampshire and the Solent mayoral election for the party.In a post in February, referring to a news story about the UK government supposedly considering talks about reparations for slavery – which ministers have in fact rejected – Parry is said to have written: “Lammy must go home to the Caribbean where his loyalty lies

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Starmer’s communications chief to address cabinet on media strategy overhaul

Keir Starmer’s Whitehall communications chief will address the cabinet on overhauling the government’s media strategy on Tuesday as ministers increasingly try to combat far-right rhetoric online.David Dinsmore, a former editor of the Sun who was appointed permanent secretary for government communications in November, will speak to ministers about modernising the way they reach voters.The government is concerned about the proliferation of false and inflammatory far-right content on social media and is stepping up efforts to communicate on those platforms.A New Media Unit (NMU) was set up inside the Cabinet Office by Starmer’s aides soon after Labour came to power to coordinate those efforts.The work is led on the ministerial side by Darren Jones, who was tasked by Starmer on his appointment as chief secretary to the prime minister in September to develop and modernise the government’s communications

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US puts £31bn tech ‘prosperity deal’ with Britain on ice

The US has paused its promised multi-billion-pound investment into British tech over trade disagreements, marking a serious setback in US-UK relations.The £31bn “tech prosperity deal”, hailed by Keir Starmer as “a generational stepchange in our relationship with the US” when it was announced during Donald Trump’s state visit, has been put on ice by Washington.As part of the deal, US tech companies pledged to spend billions in the UK, including a £22bn investment from Microsoft and £5bn from Google. But Washington has paused the implementation of the agreement, citing a lack of progress from the UK in lowering trade barriers in other areas.British officials sought to downplay the development, which was first reported by the New York Times

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With Starmer’s enemies short on options, Labour MPs have to make do with gossip

In the corner of one of Westminster’s endless Christmas receptions, a Conservative veteran of the Brexit years admits they are somewhat baffled by the frenzied leadership speculation among the new Labour ranks.It was easy to forget, they said, given how many Tory leaders the party cycled through – but prime ministers were not that easy to dislodge.Theresa May’s predicament is a useful point of comparison. She lost a majority, lost multiple Commons votes on her flagship policy, lost dozens of ministers and cabinet ministers, had members of her own party selling “chuck Chequers” badges at her party conference, and narrowly survived a confidence vote before she was finally ousted. Yes, the Labour leader is polling at historic lows – but things can get a lot worse