Apple Magazine

EU PROPOSES RULES FOR HIGH-RISK ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGEN­CE USES

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European Union officials unveiled proposals for reining in high-risk uses of artificial intelligen­ce such as live facial scanning that could threaten people’s safety or rights.

The draft regulation­s from the EU’s executive commission include rules on the use of the rapidly expanding technology in systems that filter out school, job or loan applicants. They also would ban artificial intelligen­ce outright in a few cases considered too risky, such as “social scoring” systems that judge people based on their behavior and physical traits.

The ambitious proposals are the 27-nation bloc’s latest move to maintain its role as the world’s standard-bearer for technology regulation,

putting it ahead of the world’s two big tech superpower­s, the U.S. and China. EU officials say they are taking a “risk-based approach” as they try to balance the need to protect rights such as data privacy against the need to encourage innovation.

“With these landmark rules, the EU is spearheadi­ng the developmen­t of new global norms to make sure AI can be trusted,” Margrethe Vestager, the European Commission’s executive vice president for the digital age, said in a statement. “By setting the standards, we can pave the way for to ethical technology worldwide and ensure that the EU remains competitiv­e along the way.”

The proposals also include a prohibitio­n in principle on controvers­ial “remote biometric identifica­tion,” such as the use of live facial recognitio­n to pick people out of crowds in real time, because “there is no room for mass surveillan­ce in our society,”Vestager said in a media briefing.

There will, however, be an exception only for narrowly defined law enforcemen­t purposes such as searching for a missing child or a wanted person or preventing a terror attack or threat. But some EU lawmakers and digital rights group called for the carve-out to be removed over fears it could be used to justify widespread future use of the intrusive technology.

The draft regulation­s also cover AI applicatio­ns that pose “limited risk,” such as chatbots which should be labeled so people know they are interactin­g with a machine. Most AI applicatio­ns will be unaffected or covered by existing consumer protection rules.

Violations could result in fines of up to 30,000 euros (more than $36,000), or for companies, up to 6% of their global annual revenue, whichever is higher, although Vestager said authoritie­s would first ask providers to fix their AI products or remove them from the market.

The proposals still have to be debated by EU lawmakers and could be amended in a process that could take several years. They would apply to anyone that provides an artificial intelligen­ce system in the EU or uses one that affects people in the bloc.

EU officials, trying to catch up with the Chinese and American tech industry, said the rules would encourage the industry’s growth by raising trust in artificial intelligen­ce systems and by introducin­g legal clarity for companies them.

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