UK and allies have narrowing window to stay ahead in tech race, spy chief says

UNSTOPPABLE FORCE OF AI With the speed of technological ⁠change, ​such as the advancements in artificial intelligence, she said the "ground beneath our feet is shifting" and Britain and its allies faced a challenge to stay ahead of the competition, not least from China.

UK and allies have narrowing window to stay ahead in tech race, spy chief says

Britain is at a "moment of consequence" amid hybrid attacks from Russia and other adversaries and a narrowing window to stay ‌ahead in the race to develop AI and other technology to protect itself, a British spy chief said on Wednesday. Delivering the first annual lecture for her GCHQ organisation, Anne Keast-Butler warned that the world was in a "new era of radical uncertainty, contested geopolitics and rapidly changing technology".

"The risk ‌of miscalculation is as high as I’ve ever seen it," she said. GCHQ, whose role includes eavesdropping on communications and providing national cybersecurity, ‌is one of the three arms of British intelligence, which have for years been warning about the threats posed by Russia and China. Last month, the head of the National Cyber Security Centre, which is part of GCHQ, warned that Britain should brace for a rise in cyberattacks linked to hostile states.

In her speech at Bletchley ⁠Park, the ​secret home of Britain's codebreakers in ⁠World War Two, Keast-Butler said British intelligence and defence partners were "working tirelessly" to degrade the threat from Russia, from cyberattacks, to countering sabotage and assassination attempts. She said Moscow was "scaling ⁠up its daily hybrid activity against the UK and Europe, stretching from the seabed to cyberspace".

"One area in sharp focus for us is protecting the ​data and energy flowing through the critical cables and pipelines in and around British waters – we do this by exposing Russia’s ⁠intent, motive and underwater capabilities," she said. Both Moscow and Beijing have routinely denied accusations of cyberattacks or attacks targeting critical infrastructure. UNSTOPPABLE FORCE OF AI

With the speed of technological ⁠change, ​such as the advancements in artificial intelligence, she said the "ground beneath our feet is shifting" and Britain and its allies faced a challenge to stay ahead of the competition, not least from China. "AI is an unstoppable force with great opportunity. But it’s also a force with ⁠risks," she said. "As AI gains increased autonomy, we all have an intergenerational duty to harness and secure it for good; to protect our ⁠national security, our economy and our ⁠way of life."

She said securing and defending space-based technology was critical with both China and Russia investing heavily in space to support both peace and war ambitions. "When it comes to technology and data, there’s ‌a narrowing window for ‌the UK and our allies to stay ahead," she said.

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