Europe agrees to the evolution of regulations related to artificial intelligence
The European Union has announced its agreement to adopt rules related to the control of artificial intelligence. |
According to the foreign policy group Tasnim news agency, Union Europe has reached an interim agreement that will regulate the use of artificial intelligence in biometric surveillance, as well as artificial intelligence systems such as GPT chat.
According to Reuters, the agreement between EU countries and members of the European Parliament was reached after hours of negotiations. The parties will try to adjust the details and these rules may change in the coming days. Having positioned himself as a pioneer while being aware of the importance of his role as a world standard initiator, I believe this will be a historic day.
This agreement requires fundamental models such as “ChatGPT” and the overall goal is to align AI with clear and transparent commitments before it is released to the market. This includes setting up technical documentation that complies with European copyright law and publishing a summary of details on its use for education. Very effective fundamental models will be used to guide assessments and reduce fundamental risk, guide adversary testing, report to the European Commission on serious incidents, monitor cyber security and report on their energy efficiency.
Governments can use true biometric surveillance only in public places to arrest criminals for certain crimes, to prevent actual or anticipated threats such as terrorist attacks, and to search for suspects of very serious crimes. This agreement prohibits users from cognitive behavioral manipulation, untargeted examination of photos related to people’s faces on the Internet or videos, social credibility and biometric classification systems to find out political, religious and philosophical beliefs and gender and racial orientations.
The law is expected to be formally approved to take effect early next year and implemented two years after that. Governments around the world are seeking to balance the benefits of technology that can engage in human-like conversations, answer questions, and write computer code without the need to put a bodyguard in that space.
Publisher | Tasnim News |