If not the answer, perhaps a baseline?
https://www.bespacific.com/un-unchecked-ai-progress-may-pose-catastrophic-risks/
UN – Unchecked AI progress may pose catastrophic risks
“The Preliminary Report of the Independent International Scientific Panel on AI: Evidence-based assessment of opportunities, risks and impacts of AI is a first-of-its-kind independent scientific assessment of the capabilities, emerging opportunities and risks of artificial intelligence. The Panel, composed of independent scientists and experts from all 5 UN regions, outlines trends in AI. It’s central warning: current safeguards cannot keep pace with the growth of AI’s capabilities. It identifies a crucial evidence challenge for decision-makers around the world: policymakers need scientific evidence to effectively govern AI, but by the time the evidence is clear, it may be too late to act on it. In the report, the Panel outlines its findings across seven key domains:
AI science, advances & trajectories
Societal applications: science, health, education & agriculture
Economic implications
Security, systems & environmental implications
Human rights, information & democracy
Cultural & individual flourishing, autonomy and child safety
Management, governance & reliability
This Preliminary Report marks the beginning of the Panel’s work. The Panel will continue to deepen its evidence base through consultations, engagement with the scientific community, and thematic briefs on emerging or fast-moving issues. Its next annual report will inform the second Global Dialogue in May 2027 in New York. The preliminary report will inform the inaugural Global Dialogue on AI Governance, to be held on 6 and 7 July 2026 in Geneva, providing a common scientific starting point for discussion.
Curious…
https://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2026/07/cybersecurity-mission-creep-in-the-us.html
Cybersecurity Mission Creep in the US
Interesting paper: “Cybersecurity Mission Creep.”
Abstract: Cybersecurity is experiencing mission creep. Policymakers are casting more and more problems as issues of cybersecurity. So reframed, wildly different policy issues, from misinformation, to child social media safety laws, to antitrust regulations, to alleged journalist misconduct, to anti-sex trafficking statutes become what this Article calls “cybersecuritized.” Before this reframing, these issues present as important but not existential. But once cybersecuritization positions the issues as threats intensified by their technological nature, they gain access to the politics and law of urgency and exceptionalism and invite troubling governance responses.
Positioned as security threats, cybersecuritized issues become endowed with the apparent normative power to override countervailing considerations, oversimplifying the problem. Cybersecuritization’s oversimplification similarly risks unidimensional solutions and invites use of argumentative trump cards, like First Amendment challenges. Cybersecuritization also invites deference to purported specialists and their proposed solutions. Together, the reductive tendencies of cybersecuritization and the deference it prompts to specialists renders ultimate governance choices more opaque. And this opacity can erode public trust and political legitimacy.
This Article surfaces the phenomenon of cybersecuritization and offers a novel framework for analyzing and critiquing it. Mining cases from across criminal and civil domains, the account also demonstrates the insidiousness of cybersecuritization and the likelihood that it will continue to expand. Confronting cybersecuritization is crucial. If we continue to ignore it, we risk abdicating further responsibility for difficult choices to the trump card of cybersecurity. This Article’s analysis and critique aim to help reclaim the hard work of governance for our hands.
I don’t quite get the economic benefits. Political benefits seem obvious.
https://thenextweb.com/news/openai-5-percent-stake-trump-administration
OpenAI has reportedly offered Washington a 5% stake worth $42.6bn
OpenAI has proposed handing the US government a 5% equity stake in the company, according to the Financial Times, as the White House and Silicon Valley’s best-funded startup edge closer to a deal that has been under discussion for more than a year.
… The politics around the idea are messier than the mechanics. Senator Bernie Sanders has pushed a competing and considerably more aggressive plan, the American AI Sovereign Wealth Fund Act, which would impose a one-time 50% stock tax on large AI companies to seed a fund the senator’s office projects could reach $7 trillion.
Palantir’s Alex Karp has argued that OpenAI’s voluntary 5% offer will look modest next to Sanders’ proposal, and that full nationalisation of frontier AI companies is coming regardless of which version wins first.
Where the two plans agree is on the underlying premise, that a handful of AI companies are about to become extraordinarily large and that the public should hold some claim on that value before it fully accrues to private shareholders. [Why? Bob]