By Invitation | Artificial Intelligence

An agenda to maximise AI’s benefits and minimise harms, by David Patterson

How technologists, researchers and policymakers can reassure people AI will serve the public good

Illustration: Dan Williams

People are reacting with both fascination and fear to the rapid deployment of artificial intelligence (AI). Some see the next era of humanity and others, imminent dangers. Without visibility into how AI is being developed and brought into their lives, people just aren’t equipped to navigate the rapidly evolving landscape.

Explore more

From the December 7th 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

Camille Grand on why Ukraine’s future turns on security guarantees

A 20,000-strong European force would be a lot more potent with an American backstop, says the former NATO official

Alex Wang on why China can’t be allowed to dominate AI-based warfare

As the “agentic” age begins, democracies can take inspiration from the past, writes the tech boss


It’s time to treat sexual violence in war as torture, writes a UN rapporteur 

Alice Edwards argues that such crimes are increasingly part of military strategy


Rishi Sunak on why Ukraine should get Russia’s frozen assets, not just the interest on them

Worries that it could rock allies’ financial systems are overdone, says Britain’s former leader

Donald Trump should not replace us with his stooges, warns a fired inspector-general

Mark Greenblatt on the dangers America will face if oversight officials lose their independence

The transatlantic relationship is crumbling, says an ex-head of NATO

Anders Fogh Rasmussen argues that Europe must accept it may be alone—and spend accordingly