Marysville Appeal-Democrat

World’s most extensive AI rules approved in EU despite criticism

- By Jillian Deutsch Bloomberg News

The European Union is enacting the most comprehens­ive guardrails on the fast-developing world of artificial intelligen­ce after the bloc’s parliament passed the AI Act on Wednesday.

The landmark set of rules, in the absence of any legislatio­n from the U.S., could set the tone for how AI is governed in the Western world. But the legislatio­n’s passage comes as companies worry the law goes too far and digital watchdogs say it doesn’t go far enough.

“Europe is now a global standard-setter in trustworth­y AI,” Internal Market Commission­er Thierry Breton said in a statement.

The AI Act becomes law after member states sign off, which is usually a formality, and once it’s published in the E.U.’S Official Journal.

The new law is intended to address worries about bias, privacy and other risks from the rapidly evolving technology. The legislatio­n would ban the use of AI for detecting emotions in workplaces and schools, as well as limit how it can be used in high-stakes situations like sorting job applicatio­ns. It would also place the first restrictio­ns on generative AI tools, which captured the world’s attention last year with the popularity of CHATGPT.

However, the bill has sparked concerns in the three months since officials reached a breakthrou­gh provisiona­l agreement after a marathon negotiatio­n session that lasted more than 35 hours.

As talks reached the final stretch last year, the French and German government­s pushed back against some of the strictest ideas for regulating generative AI, arguing that the rules will hurt European startups like France’s Mistral AI and Germany’s Aleph

Alpha Gmbh. Civil society groups like Corporate Europe Observator­y (CEO) raised concerns about the influence that Big Tech and European companies had in shaping the final text.

“This one-sided influence meant that ‘general purpose AI,’ was largely exempted from the rules and only required to comply with a few transparen­cy obligation­s,” watchdogs including CEO and Lobbycontr­ol wrote in a statement, referring to AI systems capable of performing a wider range of tasks.

A recent announceme­nt that Mistral had partnered with Microsoft Corp. raised concerns from some lawmakers. Kai Zenner, a parliament­ary assistant key in the writing of the act and now an adviser to the United Nations on AI policy, wrote that the move was strategica­lly smart and “maybe even necessary” for the French startup, but said “the E.U. legislator got played again.”

Brando Benifei, a lawmaker and leading author of the act, said the results speaks for themselves. “The legislatio­n is clearly defining the needs for safety of most powerful models with clear criteria, and so it’s clear that we stood on our feet,” he said Wednesday in a news conference.

U.S. and European companies have also raised concerns that the law will limit the bloc’s competitiv­eness.

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