No enigma as event marks Bletchley Park AI legacy

25 Apr, 2024
Newsdesk
TechWorks, the industry association at the core of the UK DeepTech community, announced the landmark launch of TechWorks AI at the iconic Bletchley Park last week to facilitate innovation and address the threats that a growing world of AI tech affords.
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John Moor, COO of TechWorks opening the event at Bletchley Park. Courtesy – TechWorks.

The launch unites the proven communities of TechWorks to collaborate on the future evolution of AI systems, commencing with a focus on ‘engineering trustworthy AI’.

Governments and organisations are witnessing the stark reality of AI technology, the challenges faced and the importance of ascertaining the trustworthiness of AI as it underpins all aspects of our future.

The nature of these challenges, and the possible solutions, is an area in which the combined TechWorks community has significant breadth and depth of knowledge and experience.

TechWorks brings together five industry bodies covering electronic systems in automotive innovation, IoT cyber security and semiconductor manufacturing, design, and embedded systems.

The new AI initiative will allow the collaboration of expertise across these bodies to combine this knowledge and the technical building blocks needed to engineer trustworthy AI.

John Moor, COO of TechWorks said: “This is a milestone moment for the members of TechWorks and UK innovation. The use and evolution of AI systems is common to our prosperity and this is why we have taken the time to understand how to support its development in a meaningful way.

“All technology is dual purpose – it can be used beneficially, as intended, but it can also be weaponised and this is especially true for artificial intelligence and all its subdomains.”

AI technology has developed at rocket speed in recent years and those advancements are expected to accelerate in the foreseeable future so diverse expertise must be brought together to ensure AI technology is safe, secure and underpinned with trustworthy engineering.

Prior to the launch, TechWorks published a detailed whitepaper outlining why the combined industry bodies are perfectly placed to help support governments and organisations to understand the importance of developing trustworthy and responsible AI.

Moor added: “We are keen to evaluate and proliferate trust mechanisms throughout AI systems. Given the breadth of expertise within the TechWorks membership base, we are confident we can guide the future trustworthiness of AI systems.

“This requires coordinated teamwork and that is at the very heart of TechWorks AI. To all stakeholders, I invite you to engage with us, join the TechWorks AI team and help make this transformational technology safe and beneficial for all.”

The Government held the first global AI Safety Summit at the Bedfordshire location last year. AI pioneer Alan Turing led the globally renowned codebreakers team at Bletchley Park to crack German Engima machine codes during the Second World War.