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FRI · 2026-04-17 · 05:00 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0417-70205
News/Liz Kendall urges UK public to embrace AI as government make…
NSR-2026-0417-70205News Report·EN·Economic Impact

Liz Kendall urges UK public to embrace AI as government makes first £500m fund investment

UK Technology Secretary Liz Kendall is urging the UK to embrace AI, despite concerns about job displacement and cybersecurity risks. This announcement coincided with the government's first investment from its £500m sovereign AI fund, taking a stake in London-based Callosum, a company focused on AI model training, and another unnamed business.

Dan Milmo Global technology editorThe Guardian - World NewsFiled 2026-04-17 · 05:00 GMTLean · Center-LeftRead · 2 min
Liz Kendall urges UK public to embrace AI as government makes first £500m fund investment
The Guardian - World NewsFIG 01
Reading time
2min
Word count
413words
Sources cited
4cited
Entities identified
8entities
Quality score
100%
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Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

UK Technology Secretary Liz Kendall is urging the UK to embrace AI, despite concerns about job displacement and cybersecurity risks. This announcement coincided with the government's first investment from its £500m sovereign AI fund, taking a stake in London-based Callosum, a company focused on AI model training, and another unnamed business. Six UK companies will also gain access to government-funded supercomputers to develop AI models, with the government retaining the right of first refusal for investment. The initiative aims to support national AI champions and ensure companies can grow and remain in Britain. The sovereign AI unit was launched in London at Wayve, a self-driving car startup.

Confidence 0.90Sources 4Claims 5Entities 8
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Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Economic Impact
Technology
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CalmNeutralAlarmist
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0.80 / 1.00
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Sources cited
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Key claims

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Rachel Reeves said that by supporting national AI champions, the UK could ensure internationally competitive companies can start, scale and stay here.

quoteRachel Reeves
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Six UK companies will receive access to a network of government-funded supercomputers.

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The government has taken an undisclosed shareholding in London-based Callosum.

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Liz Kendall said the UK had to “seize” the opportunity offered by AI.

quoteLiz Kendall
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The UK government announced its first investment under a £500m sovereign AI fund.

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Full report

2 min read · 413 words
The UK technology secretary has urged the country to “make AI work for Britain”, brushing off fears about its impact on jobs and cybersecurity as the government announced its first investment under a £500m sovereign AI fund. Liz Kendall said the UK had to “seize” the opportunity offered by AI despite concerns underlined this month when US startup Anthropic revealed it had developed an AI model that posed a potentially significant cyber threat. Asked how the government makes the case for embracing a technology that could disrupt jobs and now cybersecurity, Kendall said: “We have to seize this to make it work, for Britain, for our jobs, for solving the biggest challenges we face as a world.”Speaking on Thursday as the government unveiled its first investment in a UK company as part of a £500m sovereign AI fund, Kendall acknowledged “people are worried about the risks and what it means for their jobs”, but AI entrepreneurs also believed they can “make it work … they can create jobs”.In January Kendall admitted “some jobs will go” as AI automates certain tasks and roles, but it would also create new employment opportunities.The government announced on Thursday it had taken an undisclosed shareholding in London-based Callosum, a company that helps different types of computer chips work together efficiently to train and operate AI models. It has also taken a stake in an as-yet-unnamed second business.Six UK companies will also receive access to a network of government-funded supercomputers to help them develop AI models in exchange for “a right of first refusal” to invest in some of those firms. The value of that supercomputer access counts towards the £500m fund.The startups using that extra compute capacity include Prima Mente, which is building “biological foundation models” to tackle diseases like Alzheimer’s; Cursive, a company developing autonomous AI agents founded by Google DeepMind alumni; and Odyssey, which develops ‘world models’, an approach to AI where systems interact with a convincing simulation of the real world.Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, said that by supporting national AI champions, the UK could ensure that internationally competitive companies can “start, scale and stay here in Britain”. The sovereign AI unit, designed to act like a venture capital fund, was launched officially on Thursday at the London offices of Wayve, a self-driving car startup now worth $8.6bn (£6.4bn).Danyal Akarca, co-founder of Callosum, said the UK was the “natural place” to build his company due to its strong university talent and private AI labs like DeepMind.
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Entities

8 identified
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Keywords & salience

9 terms
artificial intelligence
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ai investment
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sovereign ai fund
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uk technology
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ai models
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job disruption
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cybersecurity
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ai development
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supercomputers
0.40
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