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The AI Summit That Changed the Tone: Macron Forces Child Safety Onto the Global Agenda

Something shifted at the AI Impact Summit in Delhi. For years, global AI discussions have been dominated by questions of investment, competitiveness and geopolitical positioning. In Delhi, thanks in large part to Emmanuel Macron, child safety became a central rather than peripheral concern — and the shift felt permanent rather than cosmetic. The French president had prepared carefully, and it showed.
Macron came armed with specifics. He cited new Unicef and Interpol research showing that over 1.2 million children in 11 countries had been victimised by AI-generated explicit deepfakes in a single year. He referenced the scandal involving Elon Musk’s Grok chatbot being used to produce tens of thousands of sexualised child images. He connected these specific incidents to the general failure of unregulated AI development to protect the most vulnerable. His argument was not abstract — it was grounded in documented, recent harm.
The French president also set out what he intends to do about it. France’s ongoing efforts to ban social media for under-15s represent one strand of a broader approach. Through the G7, Macron plans to push for international standards that would make platforms and AI developers legally accountable for the content their systems produce or enable. He rejected the idea that this is incompatible with innovation, arguing that sustainable innovation requires a foundation of public trust.
António Guterres provided crucial multilateral backing, reframing child safety within the larger question of AI governance. The UN secretary general’s warning that “no child should be a test subject for unregulated AI” gave moral weight to what might otherwise have seemed like a narrow policy debate. Narendra Modi’s insistence that AI be child-safe and family-guided added another voice to a growing international chorus. Sam Altman’s call for a new international oversight body suggested that even within the tech industry, the case for governance is gaining ground.
The Delhi summit produced no binding agreement, but it produced something arguably more durable: a change in the terms of debate. Child safety is no longer a footnote in conversations about AI governance — it is a headline. That shift is largely Macron’s achievement, and it gives France’s G7 presidency a clear and compelling mandate. The work of turning that mandate into policy begins now.

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