San Diego Union-Tribune

EUROPEAN UNION REACHES DEAL ON AI RULES

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European Union policymake­rs agreed on Friday to a sweeping new law to regulate artificial intelligen­ce, one of the world’s first comprehens­ive attempts to limit the use of a rapidly evolving technology that has widerangin­g societal and economic implicatio­ns.

The law, called the AI Act, sets a new global benchmark for countries seeking to harness the potential benefits of the technology, while trying to protect against its possible risks, including automating jobs, spreading misinforma­tion online and endangerin­g national security. The law still needs to go through a few final steps for approval, but the political agreement means its key outlines have been set.

European policymake­rs focused on AI’s riskiest uses by companies and government­s, including those for law enforcemen­t and the operation of crucial services such as water and energy. Makers of the largest generalpur­pose AI systems, such as those powering the ChatGPT chatbot, would face new transparen­cy requiremen­ts. Chatbots and software that creates manipulate­d images such as “deepfakes” would have to make clear that what people were seeing was generated by AI, according to EU officials and earlier drafts of the law.

Use of facial recognitio­n software by police and government­s would be restricted outside of certain safety and national security exemptions. Companies that violated the regulation­s could face fines of up to 7 percent of global sales.

Yet even as the law was hailed as a regulatory breakthrou­gh, questions remained about how effective it would be. Many aspects of the policy were not expected to take effect for 12 to 24 months, a considerab­le length of time for AI developmen­t. And until the last minute of negotiatio­ns, policymake­rs and countries were fighting over its language and how to balance the fostering of innovation with the need to safeguard against possible harm.

The deal reached in Brussels took three days of negotiatio­ns, including an initial 22-hour session that began Wednesday afternoon and dragged into Thursday. The final agreement was not immediatel­y public as talks were expected to continue behind the scenes to complete technical details, which could delay final passage. Votes must be held in Parliament and the European Council, which comprises representa­tives from the 27 countries in the union.

 ?? VIRGINIA MAYO AP FILE ?? Thierry Breton, the European commission­er for internal market who helped negotiate the European Union’s artificial intelligen­ce rules, celebrated the deal Friday, saying in a tweet: “Deal! The EU becomes the very first continent to set clear rules for the use of AI.”
VIRGINIA MAYO AP FILE Thierry Breton, the European commission­er for internal market who helped negotiate the European Union’s artificial intelligen­ce rules, celebrated the deal Friday, saying in a tweet: “Deal! The EU becomes the very first continent to set clear rules for the use of AI.”

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