Los Angeles Times

CEO calls for AI regulation

Google’s Sundar Pichai seeks balanced approach, citing the technology’s benefits but also its downside.

- Associated press

Citing technology’s benefits but also its downside, Google’s Sundar Pichai seeks a balanced approach.

Google’s chief executive on Monday called for a balanced approach to regulating artificial intelligen­ce, telling a European audience that the technology brings benefits but also “negative consequenc­es.”

Sundar Pichai’s comments come as lawmakers and government­s seriously consider placing limits on how artificial intelligen­ce is used.

“There is no question in my mind that artificial intelligen­ce needs to be regulated. The question is how best to approach this,” Pichai said, according to a transcript of his speech at a Brussels think tank.

He said that there’s an important role for government­s to play and that as the European Union and the U.S. start drawing up their own approaches to regulation, “internatio­nal alignment” of any eventual rules will be crucial. He did not provide specific proposals.

Pichai spoke on the same day he was scheduled to meet the EU’s powerful competitio­n regulator, Margrethe Vestager.

Vestager in previous years has hit the Silicon Valley giant with multibilli­ondollar fines for allegedly abusing its market dominance to choke off competitio­n. After being reappointe­d for a second term last autumn with expanded powers over digital technology policies, Vestager now has her sights on artificial intelligen­ce and is drawing up rules on its ethical use.

Pichai’s comments suggest the company may be hoping to head off a broadbased crackdown by the EU on the technology. Vestager and the EU have been the among the more aggressive regulators of big tech firms, an approach U.S. authoritie­s have accelerate­d with investigat­ions into the dominance of companies such as Google, Facebook and Amazon.

“Sensible regulation must also take a proportion­ate approach, balancing potential harms with social opportunit­ies,” Pichai said, adding that it could incorporat­e existing standards such as Europe’s tough General Data Protection Regulation rather than starting from scratch.

Though artificial intelligen­ce promises big benefits, he raised concerns about its potential downside, citing as one example its role in facial recognitio­n technology, which can be used to find missing persons but also for “nefarious reasons” that he didn’t specify.

In 2018, Google pledged not to use AI in applicatio­ns related to weapons, surveillan­ce that violates internatio­nal norms, or actions that go against human rights.

Pichai was also scheduled on Monday to meet Frans Timmermans, the EU commission­er overseeing the European Green Deal, the bloc’s plan to fight climate change by making the continent carbon-neutral by 2050, including through technology.

 ?? Chandan Khanna AFP/Getty Images ?? GOOGLE Chief Executive Sundar Pichai said there’s “no question” about the need for regulation.
Chandan Khanna AFP/Getty Images GOOGLE Chief Executive Sundar Pichai said there’s “no question” about the need for regulation.

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