Artificial intelligence should be more strictly regulated in the EU

Agreement reached
Artificial intelligence should be more strictly regulated in the EU

ChatGPT started a year ago – and AI really hit the mainstream. Europe is set to become the first continent with clear AI rules

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After tough negotiations, it is finally here: the AI ​​law, with which the EU wants to be a global pioneer. Applications with artificial intelligence will therefore be regulated in the future – but there should still be room for innovation.

For the use of artificial intelligence (AI) in the EU stricter rules will apply in the future. Negotiators from the European Parliament and EU states agreed on the relevant rules on Friday evening in Brussels after long negotiations. According to the EU Parliament, this is the world’s first AI law.

Artificial intelligence has long been part of everyday life

Artificial intelligence usually refers to applications based on machine learning, in which software sifts through large amounts of data for matches and draws conclusions from them. They are already being used in many areas. For example, such programs can evaluate images from computer tomographs faster and with greater accuracy than humans. Self-driving cars also try to predict the behavior of other road users. And chatbots or automatic playlists from streaming services also work with AI.

EU wants to divide AI into risk groups

The EU Commission proposed the law in April 2021. Accordingly, AI systems should be divided into different risk groups. The higher the potential dangers of an application, the higher the requirements should be. The hope is that the rules will be copied around the world.

Recently, however, the negotiations almost failed – due to the question of regulation of so-called basic models. These are very powerful AI models that have been trained on a broad set of data. They can be the basis for many other applications. These include GPT. Germany, France and Italy had previously called for only specific applications of AI to be regulated, but not the basic technology itself. But the planned rules for facial recognition using AI, for example for national security purposes, also caused controversy.

The European Parliament and the states still have to agree to the now agreed project, but this is considered a formality.

yks
DPA

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