E.U. Takes a Step Closer to Passing the World’s Most Comprehensive AI Regulation
The European Union’s flagship artificial intelligence regulation took a major step toward becoming law on Wednesday, after lawmakers voted to approve the text of the law that would ban real-time facial recognition, and place new transparency requirements on generative AI tools like ChatGPT.
The regulation—known as the E.U. AI Act—will now progress to the final “trilogue” stage of the E.U.’s regulatory process. There, officials will attempt to reach a compromise between the draft of the law just approved by the E.U. Parliament, a different version preferred by the bloc’s executive branch, and the desires of member states. That process will begin on Wednesday night and must be completed by January if the law is to come into force before E.U. elections next year.
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“This moment is hugely significant,” says Daniel Leufer, a senior policy analyst focused on AI at Access Now’s Brussels office. “What the European Union says poses an unacceptable risk to human rights will be taken as a blueprint around the world.”
The version of the rules approved by E.U. lawmakers on Wednesday states that any AIs applied to “high risk” use cases like employment, border control, and education must comply with a list of safety requirements including risk assessments, transparency, and logging. The Act does not automatically consider “general purpose” AIs like ChatGPT to be high risk, but it does impose transparency requirements and risk assessments for so-called “foundation models,” or powerful AI systems trained on large quantities of data. Purveyors of foundation models, including the likes of OpenAI, Google, and Microsoft, will for example be required to declare whether copyrighted material has been used to train their AIs. There is no similar requirement, however, to declare whether personal data has been used during their training.
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A last-minute attempt by a bloc of right-wing lawmakers in the European Parliament to remove the Act’s proposed ban on real-time facial recognition was rejected by lawmakers on Wednesday.
In the forthcoming trilogue stage, the European Council—the arm of the bloc representing the member state governments—is expected to argue strongly for AI tools used by law enforcement and border forces to be exempt from the requirements placed on “high risk” systems, according to Access Now’s Leufer.
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“After today’s AI Act plenary vote, the Parliament’s negotiating team have a strong mandate to demand that these vital protections are not undermined during trilogue negotiations,” Leufer says. “The Parliament must hold the line against industry lobbying and state overreach to keep these victories secure and expand them to people at the E.U.’s borders, and try to close the gaps and loopholes that remain.”
This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.