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<p>Last November, the Deputy Prime Minister established the ‘Incubator for AI’, a
team who sit in the Cabinet Office. This team’s mission is to help departments harness
the potential of AI to improve lives and the delivery of public services.</p><p>The
early work of the Government’s AI incubator has already proven that it is possible
to make effective AI tools for use in the UK Government, and that building these in-house
represents strong value for money. As this is an incubator, there are projects at
varying stages of development.</p><p>I can share that details about some of their
pilot projects can be found on their website at https://ai.gov.uk, and include</p><ul><li><p>A
consultation response tool that can read, summarise and triage responses to consultations.
As the Government initiates more than 700 consultations every year, this tool can
free up time for us to undertake more engagement with the public on a broader range
of issues.</p></li><li><p>Caddy, an AI powered co-pilot for customer service functions
everywhere, which is currently in trial in Manchester. Built in collaboration with
Citizens Advice, it seamlessly integrates into existing systems and provides expert
advice to advisors and call handlers. A bespoke Civil Service AI assistant called
‘Redbox Multitool’ (based on the Ministerial RedBox previously announced) which is
tailored for the use of UK government, including a range of secure efficiency-generating
features appropriate for central government work.</p></li><li><p>Signing a Collaboration
Charter with NHSE to work together on AI, as well as data infrastructure projects
to support better operations in healthcare.</p></li></ul><p>Information about other
pilots will be released as they pass development and testing gateways.</p><p><strong>
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