Article III: ISIA
- Treaty Parties hereby establish the International Superintelligence Agency (ISIA), to implement this Treaty and its provisions, including those for international verification of compliance with it, and to provide a forum for consultation and cooperation among Parties.
- There are hereby established as the organs of the ISIA: the Conference of the Parties, the Executive Council, and the Technical Secretariat.
- Conference of the Parties
- The Conference of the Parties comprises all Treaty Parties.
- The Conference of the Parties shall: Determine overall policy; adopt and oversee the budget; elect members of the Executive Council; consider compliance matters reported by the Executive Council; and adopt and revise Annexes upon Executive Council recommendation.
- It shall convene in regular session no less than annually, or at a more frequent rate as may be set by the Conference, in addition to special sessions as required. Each Party has one vote. Quorum is a majority of Parties.
- Executive Council
- The Executive Council shall have 15 members: (i) 5 designated seats for permanent members of the United Nations Security Council, and (ii) 10 elected seats distributed by equitable geographic representation. Details of this are elaborated in Annex A.
- Elected members serve two-year terms. Half of the seats are elected each year.
- The Executive Council shall: approve challenge inspections; recommend budget and policy to the Conference; appoint the Director-General; provide oversight of the Technical Secretariat and approve its recommendations.
- Decision making processes are as follows:
- The Executive Council elects the Chair and Vice Chair of the Executive Council.
- The Chair or Vice Chair can act as the presiding officer.
- Voting proceeds by One Member, One Vote.
- Votes to approve a challenge inspection under Article X require a majority.
- Votes to recall or appoint a Director-General require two-thirds majority.
- All other decisions require a majority.
- Quorum requires two-thirds of the Executive Council
- Technical Secretariat and Director-General
- The Director-General of the Technical Secretariat shall be its head and chief administrative officer.
- The Director-General is appointed by the Executive Council for a four-year term, renewable once. The Executive Council can recall the Director-General.
- The Technical Secretariat shall at its outset include technical divisions for Chip Tracking and Manufacturing Safeguards, Chip Use Verification Safeguards, Research Controls, Information Consolidation, Technical Reviews, Administration and Finance, and Legal and Compliance. The Director-General can create and disband technical divisions.
- The Technical Secretariat, by means of the Director-General, proposes changes to technical definitions and safeguard protocols, as necessary to implement Article IV, Article V, Article VI, Article VII, Article VIII, Article IX, and Article X of this Treaty.
- Time-sensitive changes to FLOP thresholds (Article IV), the size of covered compute clusters (Article V), and the boundaries of restricted research (Article VIII) may be implemented by the Director-General immediately in the case where inaction poses a security risk. Such changes remain in effect for thirty days. Past that, the changes need approval from the Executive Council to remain in effect.
- The Executive Council shall make decisions on matters of substance as far as possible by consensus; the Director-General should make efforts to achieve consensus. If consensus is not possible at the end of 24 hours, a vote will be taken, and the Executive Council shall accept the changes if a majority of members present and voting vote to accept the changes, and shall reject them otherwise.
- The ISIA’s regular budget is funded by assessed contributions of Parties, using a scale derived from the UN assessment scale, subject to a floor and ceiling set by the Executive Council. Member states also have the option of making voluntary contributions for AI safety research related to alignment, interpretability, and capacity-building activities of member states including beneficial uses of safe AI, test bed development, good practices, information sharing, and the facilitation of cooperation and joint activities loosely modeled on the IAEA network of Nuclear Security Support Centers.
* The Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) conducts inspections, monitors the destruction of chemical weapons stockpiles, and assists in preparation for chemical weapons attacks, among various other functions critical to the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC). The CWC entered force in 1997; its 193 parties work to effect and maintain a prohibition on the use, development, and proliferation of chemical weapons and their precursors, with some narrow exemptions.
† The IAEA was established in 1957, more than a decade before the NPT. The NPT was able to designate this pre-existing body to carry out some functions. In the case of artificial intelligence, no such international body exists yet, so our treaty must commit parties to creating one.