Use of AI for medical diagnoses and police work discussed by Home Secretary

27 February 2024, 07:24

James Cleverly visit to US
James Cleverly visit to US. Picture: PA

The Conservative minister told an audience of people involved in the tech industry he hoped AI could ‘amplify’ the work of humans.

The use of artificial intelligence (AI) for medical diagnoses, border checks and within police forces has been discussed by the Home Secretary as he visited California to meet with tech firms.

James Cleverly spoke to Reid Hoffman, the internet entrepreneur who founded business-based social media platform LinkedIn, at an event at the Microsoft offices in San Francisco on Monday evening.

The Conservative minister told an audience of people involved in the tech industry he hoped AI could “amplify” the work of humans.

He said: “I still envisage there being lots of roles for humans – police officers, border officials, civil servants – but what I want them doing is the kind of stuff that really only humans can do.”

James Cleverly visit to US
Home Secretary James Cleverly (left) also met with Clint Smith, chief legal officer of the social media platform Discord in San Francisco on Monday (Stefan Rousseau, PA)

During the discussion, Mr Hoffman said: “Say, for example, governments were to say yes we realise that there can be a medical assistant on every smartphone and less than a billion people have access to doctors.

“How do we have it? How do we enable that?”

Mr Cleverly also raised the prospect of professional indemnity for firms developing technology such as driverless cars, to cover them in the event they were sued.

Speaking after the event, he said: “We want AI to be used. We want it to work.

“We have to put safety measures in place but the opportunities are amazing – through medical research, diagnostic tools, all kinds of productivity gains can be unlocked.

“We want to make sure AI works, works well and we protect ourselves from the potential hazard and harms that come with it.”

Mr Cleverly had warned of the dangers of deepfakes generated by AI, saying it could provide the “perfect storm” for those looking to hijack the upcoming general election.

He said in meetings with leading tech firms on Monday he had discussed issues including online safety, child protection, fraud, AI and potential risks.

He said: “All these things require solutions, they will be solutions the tech firms produce, hopefully in collaboration and coordination with UK Government. It’s been a really productive set of meetings.”

Speaking to Mr Hoffman, he said there was “no simple answer” and work needed to be done to build “relationships of trust” within the industry.

But, he added: “I don’t think we can hang around.”

By Press Association

More Technology News

See more More Technology News

TikTok icon on a smartphone

TikTok to introduce new tools to flag AI-generated content

A new Nokia 3210

Nokia 3210 relaunched to mark handset’s 25th anniversary

Online Safety

Online safety rules don’t go far enough, bereaved parents say

A child using a laptop

Tech firms must ‘tame aggressive algorithms’ under Ofcom online safety rules

A new Apple iPad

Apple unveils new iPads on ‘biggest day’ for device

Grant Shapps

State involvement in MoD cyber attack cannot be ruled out, Grant Shapps says

Rishi Sunak visit to London businesses

‘Malign actor’ behind MoD cyber attack, Sunak says

Cyber crime

UK and allies sanction Russian leader of ransomware gang

The sign for the Ministry of Defence in London

Shapps to update MPs on hack targeting defence payroll details

The UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology (UKCEH) is working with partners across the world to pioneer the use of automated biodiversity monitoring stations.

AI can ‘transform understanding of biodiversity threats and support action’

Virus on computer screen

Data stolen in cyber attack on health board published on dark web

Transport Secretary Mark Harper having a ride in a self-driving car being tested by automated driving company Wayve in Westminster

UK firm Wayve secures over £800m in funding to build AI for self-driving cars

An Openreach engineer with his van

Sale of copper-based phone and broadband services to stop in more areas

MoD

Armed forces personnel bank data compromised in Ministry of Defence hack

Coins and banknotes

Insurers warn about fake and manipulated images being used in claims

TikTok on a phone

TikTok and Universal settle music royalties dispute