Global Times

EU rights watchdog warns of pitfalls in use of AI

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The European Union’s rights watchdog has warned of the risks of using artificial intelligen­ce in predictive policing, medical diagnoses and targeted advertisin­g as the bloc mulls rules in 2021 to address the challenges posed by the technology.

While AI is widely used by law enforcemen­t agencies, rights groups say it is also abused by authoritar­ian regimes for mass and discrimina­tory surveillan­ce. Critics also worry about the violation of people’s fundamenta­l rights and data privacy rules.

The Vienna- based EU Agency for Fundamenta­l Rights ( FRA) urged policymake­rs in a report issued on

Monday to provide more guidance on how existing rules apply to AI and ensure that future AI laws protect fundamenta­l rights.

“AI is not infallible, it is made by people – and humans can make mistakes. That is why people need to be aware when AI is used, how it works and how to challenge automated decisions,” FRA Director Michael O’Flaherty said in a statement.

FRA’s report comes as the European Commission, the EU executive, considers legislatio­n in 2021 to cover so- called high risk sectors such as healthcare, energy, transport and parts of the public sector.

The agency said AI rules must respect all fundamenta­l rights, with safeguards to ensure this and include a guarantee that people can challenge decisions taken by AI and that companies need to be able to explain how their systems take AI decisions.

It also said there should be more research into the potentiall­y discrimina­tory effects of AI so Europe can guard against it, and the bloc must further clarify how data protection rules apply to the technology. FRA’s report is based on more than 100 interviews with organizati­ons using AI.

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