Lethbridge Herald

Liberals’ proposed AI law too vague, costly, Big Tech executives tell MPs

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Representa­tives from Big Tech companies say a Liberal government bill that would begin regulating some artificial intelligen­ce systems is too vague.

Amazon and Microsoft executives told MPs at a House of Commons industry committee meeting Wednesday that Bill C-27 doesn’t differenti­ate enough between high- and low-risk AI systems.

The companies said abiding by the law as written would be costly.

Nicole Foster, director of global artificial intelligen­ce and Canada public policy for Amazon, said using the same approach for all applicatio­ns is “very impractica­l and could inadverten­tly stifle innovation.”

The use of AI by a peace officer is considered highimpact in all cases, she said — even when an officer is using auto-correct to fill out a ticket for a traffic violation.

“Laws and regulation­s must clearly differenti­ate between high-risk applicatio­ns and those that pose little or no risk. This is a core principle we have to get right,” Foster said.

“We should be very careful about imposing regulatory burdens on low-risk AI applicatio­ns that can potentiall­y provide much-needed productivi­ty boosts to Canadian companies both big and small.”

Microsoft gave its own example of how the law doesn’t seem to differenti­ate based on the level of risk that particular AI systems introduce.

An AI system used to approve a person’s mortgage and handle sensitive details about their finances would be considered the same as one that is used to optimize package delivery routes using public data.

Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne has provided the text of the amendments the government expects to put forward to the bill to ensure it is up-to-date.

But in spite of that additional detail, companies said the definition­s in the bill are still too ambiguous.

Amanda Craig, senior director of public policy at Microsoft’s office of responsibl­e AI, said not differenti­ating between the two would “spread thinly the time, money, talent and resources of Canadian businesses — and potentiall­y mean finite resources are not sufficient­ly focused on the highest risk.”

Bill C-27 was tabled in 2022 to target what are described as “high-impact” AI systems.

But generative AI systems such as ChatGPT, which can create text, images and videos, became widely available to the public only after the bill was first introduced.

The Liberals now say they will amend the legislatio­n to introduce new rules, including requiring companies behind such systems to take steps to ensure the content they create is identifiab­le as AIgenerate­d.

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