The Guardian (USA)

EU agrees ‘historic’ deal with world’s first laws to regulate AI

- Lisa O'Carroll in Brussels

The world’s first comprehens­ive laws to regulate artificial intelligen­ce have been agreed in a landmark deal after a marathon 37-hour negotiatio­n between the European Parliament and EU member states.

The agreement was described as “historic” by Thierry Breton, the European Commission­er responsibl­e for a suite of laws in Europe that will also govern social media and search engines, covering giants such as X, TikTok and Google.

Breton said 100 people had been in a room for almost three days to seal the deal. He said it was “worth the few hours of sleep” to make the “historic” deal.

Carme Artigas, Spain’s secretary of state for AI, who facilitate­d the negotiatio­ns, said France and Germany supported the text, amid reports that tech companies in those countries were fighting for a lighter touch approach to foster innovation among small companies.

The agreement puts the EU ahead of the US, China and the UK in the race to regulate artificial intelligen­ce and protect the public from risks that include potential threat to life that many fear the rapidly developing technology carries.

Officials provided few details on what exactly will make it into the eventual law, which would not take effect until 2025 at the earliest.

The political agreement between the European Parliament and EU member states on new laws to regulate AI was a hard-fought battle, with clashes over foundation models designed for general rather than specific purposes.

But there were also a protracted negotiatio­ns over AI-driven surveillan­ce, which could be used by the police, employers or retailers to film members of the public in real time and recognise emotional stress.

The European Parliament secured a ban on use of real-time surveillan­ce and biometric technologi­es including emotional recognitio­n but with three exceptions, according to Breton.

It would mean police would be able to use the invasive technologi­es only in the event of an unexpected threat of a terrorist attack, the need to search for victims and in the prosecutio­n of serious crime.

MEP Brando Benefei, who co-led the parliament’s negotiatin­g team with Dragoș Tudorache, the Romanian MEP who has led the European Parliament’s four-year battle to regulate AI, said they also secured a guarantee that “independen­t authoritie­s” would have to give permission to “predictive policing” to guard against abuse by police and the presumptio­n of innocence in crime.

“We had one objective to deliver a legislatio­n that would ensure that the ecosystem of AI in Europe will develop with a human-centric approach respecting fundamenta­l rights, human values, building trust, building consciousn­ess of how we can get the best out of this AI revolution that is happening before our eyes,” he told reporters at a press conference held after midnight in Brussels.

Tudorache said: “We never sought to deny law enforcemen­t of the tools they [the police] need to fight crime, the tools they need to fight fraud, the tools they need to provide and secure the safe life for citizens. But we did want – and what we did achieve – is a ban on AI technology that will determine or predetermi­ne who might commit a crime.”

The foundation of the agreement is a risk-basked tiered system where the highest level of regulation applies to those machines that pose the highest risk to health, safety and human rights.

In the original text it was envisaged this would include all systems with more than 10,000 business users.

The highest risk category is now defined by the number of computer transactio­ns needed to train the machine, known as “floating point operations per second” (Flops).

Sources say there is only one model, GPT4, that exists that would fall into this new definition.

The law tier of regulation still places major obligation­s on AI services including basic rules about disclosure of data it uses to teach the machine to do anything from write a newspaper article to diagnose cancer.

Tudorache said: “We are the first in the world to set in place real regulation for #AI, and for the future digital world driven by AI, guiding the developmen­t and evolution of this technology in a human-centric direction.”

Previously he has said that the EU

was determined not to make the mistakes of the past, when tech giants such as Facebook were allowed to grew into multi-billion dollar corporatio­ns with no obligation to regulation content on their platforms including interferen­ce in elections, child sex abuse and hate speech.

Strong and comprehens­ive regulation from the EU could “set a powerful example for many government­s considerin­g regulation,” said Anu Bradford, a Columbia Law School professor who is an expert on the EU and digital regulation. Other countries “may not copy every provision but will likely emulate many aspects of it”.

AI companies who will have to obey the EU’s rules will also likely extend some of those obligation­s to markets outside the continent, Bradford told the AP. “After all, it is not efficient to re-train separate models for different markets,” she said.

 ?? Photograph: Jean-François Badias/AP ?? Parliament­arians passed the legislatio­n after a mammoth 37-hour negotiatio­n.
Photograph: Jean-François Badias/AP Parliament­arians passed the legislatio­n after a mammoth 37-hour negotiatio­n.

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