The UK government has announced a new strategic partnership with the Open AI, which can give the company the opportunity to “enhance AI security research cooperation, investment in data centers such as UK AI infrastructure, and find new ways to find taxpayers.” Following the move in January, the introduction of the AI Action Plan, which rapidly tracks the construction of data centers in some areas of the UK.
In the partnership agreement (fully voluntarily)-a Memorandum of Technically understands-Openation and the Department of Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT) agree to deal with positive voices, but eventually the “high-level AI models” are used to seek “AI models” to seek “AI models” in both public and private sectors. Openi also has to help identify DSIT that it can provide AI Action Plan infrastructure goals, and possibly find a building in one of the UK’s new data center -friendly “AI Growth Zone”.
All of this seems to be irrelevant and non -committee because the Memorandum Open is signed. They are not legally bound. It is good for the elected officials in the partnership that the UK is competing in the AI, but it does not tie anyone, including the UK government: If the Anthropic Claude offers a contract on the cloud, they can take it.
Open London already has offices, so deepening its investment is not beyond the question. The signing of the memorandum is also in line with the growing interest in working with the open governments for the AI industry’s high -tech vaccine. After this logic it is found that if Openi can get regulators depending on their tools – they say, a chat GPT government is specially developed for government agencies – they will be more inclined to the company in policy decisions. Or at least, demonstrating cooperation can win a sweet deal on the road to the company.


