4.8 • 731 Ratings
🗓️ 24 April 2025
⏱️ 29 minutes
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The Prime Minister, Sir Keir Starmer wants the UK to become “one of the great AI superpowers”. Earlier this year the government published a plan to use artificial intelligence in the private and public sectors to boost growth and deliver services more efficiently. Once mainly the preserve of the tech community, AI really entered public awareness with the release of ChatGPT, a so-called “chatbot” founded by the US company OpenAI at the end of 2022. It can write essays, scripts, poems and even write computer code …and millions of people are using it. David Aaronovitch and guests discuss whether the UK could become a successful AI hub, as the government hopes and asks if we'll be able to compete globally with the US and China, the home of huge tech companies?
Guests: Dame Wendy Hall, Regius Professor of Computer Science and Director of the Web Science Institute at the University of Southampton. Eden Zoller, Chief Analyst in Applied AI, Omdia. Professor Neil Lawrence, the DeepMind Professor of Machine Learning at University of Cambridge and author of The Atomic Human Jeremy Kahn, AI Editor at Fortune magazine and author of Mastering AI: A survival guide to our superpowered future.
Presenter: David Aaronovitch Producers: Caroline Bayley, Kirsteen Knight, Nathan Gower Production coordinator: Gemma Ashman Sound Engineer: James Beard Editor: Richard Vadon
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0:00.0 | BBC Sounds, Music, Radio, podcasts. |
0:08.2 | On the 13th of January, the Prime Minister announced a vision. |
0:12.6 | Mark my words, Britain will be one of the great AI superpowers. |
0:17.1 | Now, that's not some sort of boosterism or wishful thinking. |
0:20.9 | This can be done, and it will be done. |
0:24.1 | This vision will apparently be given substance in the next couple of months, |
0:27.7 | but the questions arise in the here and now. |
0:30.5 | How can it be done? How will it be done? |
0:34.3 | In the context of a world facing the prospect of a trade war recession, a country where |
0:38.8 | economic optimism has been low for a decade, how might there be an AI-led revival? Step into |
0:46.0 | the briefing room and together we'll find out. First, a brief history of AI in the UK. |
0:57.4 | Dame Wendy Hall is Regis Professor of Computer Science |
1:00.2 | and Director of the Web Science Institute at the University of Southampton. |
1:04.4 | Dame Wendy wrote the UK government's 2017 AI strategy, |
1:08.0 | which was called Growing the Artificial Intelligence Industry in the UK. |
1:12.9 | Dame Wendy Hall, what is AI? |
1:15.9 | I knew you'd ask me that. |
1:17.6 | Well, AI is exactly what it says, artificial intelligence. |
1:22.3 | So it goes back to Turing, Alan Turing, |
1:26.2 | who wrote 75 years ago that the paper, which effectively |
1:30.1 | was Can Machines Think? And the term was coined in the 60s in America, largely by philosophers |
1:37.4 | who understood computer science or vice versa, to explore whether we could build machines |
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