# AI%20governance
Latest news and articles about AI%20governance
Total: 21 articles found

Hong Kong to Host 2026 Asia‑Pacific World Internet Summit as China Pushes AI Governance Agenda
The World Internet Conference Asia‑Pacific Summit will convene in Hong Kong on April 13–14, 2026, focusing on AI governance, digital finance and smart public services. Organizers plan to publish multiple reports, run capacity‑building sessions and launch global award submissions, signalling an effort to translate China’s governance concepts into internationally cited policy tools.

Rise of the ‘Lobsters’: OpenClaw Agents Rewire Work, Code and Control
OpenClaw — the open-source ‘lobster’ agent project — has triggered a rapid industry pivot from prompt-based interaction to executable agent ‘skills,’ drawing heavy investment from Chinese tech giants and spawning both productivity promises and security headaches. Practitioners see agents as amplifiers of individual output and a new enterprise gateway, while warning that robust cloud–edge architectures, governance and developer skills will determine who benefits.

Hong Kong Privacy Watchdog Flags Privacy and Security Risks from 'Agentic' AI Tools Like OpenClaw
Hong Kong’s Privacy Commissioner has warned about privacy and security risks posed by OpenClaw and other agentic AI systems, urging organisations and citizens to assess risks and take protective measures. The notice signals regulatory scrutiny under existing privacy law and highlights the need for stronger controls around autonomous AI agents that can access and act on data and services.

Elon Musk’s xAI Picks Up Another Brain: Thinking Machines Lab Co‑founder Devendra Chaplot Joins the Team
Devendra Chaplot, a founding member of Thinking Machines Lab, has joined Elon Musk’s xAI as the company continues to recruit researchers to pursue its stated goal of building “superintelligence.” The hire highlights xAI’s ongoing talent‑acquisition drive and raises questions about both the pace of capability development and the governance challenges such ambition entails.

Pentagon’s ‘Supply‑Chain’ Move Against Anthropic Splits Silicon Valley and Exposes Governance Gap
The Pentagon’s decision to label Anthropic a supply‑chain risk has split major US tech firms: Microsoft publicly backed Anthropic’s lawsuit, while Google and OpenAI expanded Pentagon ties. The episode exposes gaps in procurement and governance for AI, raising questions about politicization of national‑security designations and the future of private safety constraints on dual‑use technology.

China NPC Deputy Urges 'Source‑Level' Controls on Generative AI After Viral Fake Notices
A Chinese NPC deputy, Li Anrui, warned that generative AI has made fabricated content harder to spot and proposed source‑level measures: a government verification platform, mandatory AI labelling for official‑style documents, and stronger platform responsibilities. His recommendations align with Beijing’s recent policy signals to strengthen AI governance, but implementing them raises technical challenges and trade‑offs around enforcement and free expression.

OpenAI Hardware Chief Quits Over Pentagon Deal, Raising Fresh Questions About AI’s Military Role
OpenAI’s head of robotics and consumer hardware, Caitlin Kalinowski, resigned over concerns that policy safeguards were unclear before the company’s agreement with the US Department of Defense. The move underscores tensions between AI firms, government demand for advanced tools, and internal governance over ethically fraught military and surveillance applications.

China’s Industry Minister Declares “AI + Manufacturing” Non‑Negotiable, Pledges Fast‑Track Deployment
MIIT Minister Li Lecheng declared “AI + manufacturing” a non‑optional national priority at the NPC ministerial corridor, promising vigorous promotion this year. The campaign aims to scale demonstrative AI applications across manufacturing while balancing development with safety and seeking international consensus on governance.

OpenAI’s Pentagon Deal Deepens Fears of AI Militarisation — and a Trust Deficit
OpenAI announced an agreement with the Pentagon in March 2026, provoking criticism and renewed debate over the militarisation of commercial AI. Observers say the deal highlights tensions between corporate ambitions, public trust, governance gaps and geopolitical competition over advanced AI capabilities.

Chinese Report Says U.S. Military Used Anthropic’s ‘Claude’ in Venezuela Operation — Raising New Questions About AI’s Role in Warfare
A Chinese outlet reported that the U.S. military used Anthropic’s AI model Claude to analyse imagery and intelligence in an alleged January operation to remove Venezuela’s president. The claim is unverified, but highlights tensions between AI firms seeking use-limiting safeguards and defence customers seeking broad access, and raises urgent questions about oversight and the geopolitics of commercial AI in warfare.

Heilongjiang Rolls Out 'AI+' Public‑Service Push — From Jobs Matching to Medical Imaging and Real‑Time Aid Audits
Heilongjiang province has published an "AI+" plan that embeds artificial intelligence in employment services, medical imaging and social assistance oversight. The initiative aims to improve service delivery and fraud prevention but raises questions about data integration, clinical validation and governance.

AI at the Point of a Gun: Reports Say US Used Anthropic’s Claude in Venezuela Raid, Raising Ethical and Political Alarms
U.S. outlets reported that the Pentagon used Anthropic’s Claude model in a January operation in Venezuela that seized President Nicolás Maduro and his wife. Anthropic says uses must follow its safety policy but declines to confirm specifics, and the episode spotlights the tensions between commercial AI policies, military use, and enforcement.