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The European Parliament in December reached a provisional agreement on the world’s first comprehensive legislation to regulate AI, focusing on uses instead of the technology.
For general-purpose AI, transparency requirements are imposed, with reduced requirements for open source models, and additional evaluations for high-capability models. [8] [9] The Act also creates a European Artificial Intelligence Board to promote national cooperation and ensure compliance with the regulation. [10]
Many tech companies oppose the harsh regulation of AI and "While some of the companies have said they welcome rules around A.I., they have also argued against tough regulations akin to those being created in Europe" [13] Instead of trying to regulate the technology itself, some scholars suggested developing common norms including requirements ...
OpenAI is one of six tech giants to have published their responses to a Government request for AI safety policy details.
Information technology law (IT law), also known as information, communication and technology law (ICT law) or cyberlaw, concerns the juridical regulation of information technology, its possibilities and the consequences of its use, including computing, software coding, artificial intelligence, the internet and virtual worlds.
Ursula von der Leyen proposed a "new Digital Services Act", in her 2019 bid for the European Commission's presidency. [6]The expressed purpose of the DSA is to update the European Union's legal framework for illegal content on intermediaries, in particular by modernising the e-Commerce Directive adopted in 2000.
The process, which resulted in the 2004 version of the EU Transparency Directive, passed several years, consultations and revisions.The first step towards the EU Transparency Directive of 2004 took place in July 2001 when the commission of the European Union announced the first consultation regarding the transparency on publicly traded companies.
Specifically, "algorithmic transparency" states that the inputs to the algorithm and the algorithm's use itself must be known, but they need not be fair. " Algorithmic accountability " implies that the organizations that use algorithms must be accountable for the decisions made by those algorithms, even though the decisions are being made by a ...