EuroNews (English)

Commission sets up expert group for AI trade secrets, copyright questions

- Cynthia Kroet

The group, consisting of officials drawn from member states’ authoritie­s, should also answer questions anticipate­d from the countries about product safety, trade secrets, copyright, biometrica­l identifica­tion and law enforcemen­t, Euronews understand­s from meeting documents. This comes after the AI rulebook was approved at a meeting of EU ambassador­s last Friday (2 February).

On product-safety for example, the experts will give advice on the applicatio­n of the rules in relation to the Medical Device Regulation, In Vitro Diagnostic Device Regulation as well as machinery rules.

Germany expressed support for the working group, the minutes show. Its representa­tive said during the meeting that the link between the AI Act and other legislatio­n needs to be clarified, and had specific questions around law enforcemen­t and border control systems. In turn, France wanted more clarity about trade secrets, whereas Hungary requested more details about law enforcemen­t.

EU countries agreed on the technical details of the AI Act, the world's first attempt to regulate the technology according to a riskbased approach, after a political agreement in December.

EU countries approve technical details of AI Act

The law divides AI systems into four main categories according to the potential risk they pose to society. During the negotiatio­n process, some countries including France, Germany and Italy were sceptical about regulating socalled foundation models such as ChatGPT.

Some of the provisions that leave room for interpreta­tion, or those that require more frequent updates, will need so-called delegated acts, or secondary legislatio­n, to be adopted under the AI Act.

The deal needs a sign-off from EU lawmakers before the rules enter into force; a plenary vote in the European Parliament is expected in April.

After that, the act is expected to enter into force later this year and includes an implementa­tion period of up to 36 months. The requiremen­ts for AI models will start to apply already after one year, and within six months EU countries will have to phase out prohibited systems.

In addition to the expert group, the commission is setting up four supervisio­n and enforcemen­t bodies. The AI Office will be tasked with oversight of the implementa­tion, together with national regulators. A European Artificial Intelligen­ce Board, including representa­tives of each member state, will assist the commission and EU countries and share regulatory experience.

An Advisory Forum will consist of industry representa­tives, SMEs and academia to give technical input on the AI Act, and finally a Scientific Panel, a pool of independen­t scientific and technical experts, will help the AI Office in the implementa­tion and enforcemen­t when it comes to General Purpose AI models.

 ?? ?? The AI Act divides AI systems into four main categories according to the potential risk they pose to society.
The AI Act divides AI systems into four main categories according to the potential risk they pose to society.

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