Thank you, Mr. Chair, for the question.
The operating context for the code on generative AI is important, because it actually falls within a broader milieu that I think is useful. At the digital ministerial of the G7 in Gunma, Japan, earlier this spring, digital ministers of the G7 recommended to leaders that they undertake work related to generative AI and that they come to some conclusions that could be shared with ministers.
Then, at the Hiroshima meeting of G7 leaders, this was formalized in a call from G7 leaders to their respective digital ministers to do work related to generative AI, notably work on aspects of principles for governance of generative AI systems and potential work on a code of conduct. That prompted a lot of work between Canada, which was very active in the development of the actual recommendation from ministers, and our international colleagues around some of the work that needed to be done around guardrails for generative AI.
An early adopter, or an early mover in some ways, was the United States. Our counterparts, under the Biden-Harris administration, produced a set of commitments from their largest foundation model developers to a certain set of standards that they would hold themselves to in the development of foundation models, or what's sometimes called generative AI.
Canada recognized that we not only wanted to be a participant in the Hiroshima G7 process and have value added in terms of the discussion around principles and the code of conduct, but we also have our own domestic recognition of what would be important guardrails. That's particularly because AIDA, the artificial intelligence and data act, has regulations that will take shape in many ways, but the potential for concerns and harms related to generative AI and foundation models is already present in many instances.
That spawned a set of discussions with the AI ecosystem, particularly those that were actively involved in the deployment of foundation models and generative AI within their private sector and commercial context. We held a number of round tables ultimately leading up to the development of the voluntary code, which was announced at the All In conference in Montreal. It depends on how one counts, but the signatories now include a number of key foundation model companies in Canada, notably Cohere, Coveo and Aida. It also includes endorsement from the Council of Canadian Innovators, which represents a much larger swath of leaders, as well as a number of some of the larger ecosystem players like OpenText and BlackBerry.