EU mulls more restrictive regulations for large AI models: Report

Share This Post

Negotiators in the EU are reportedly considering additional restrictions for large AI models – like OpenAI’s GPT-4- as a component of the forthcoming AI Act.

Representatives in the European Union are reportedly negotiating a plan for additional regulations on the largest artificial intelligence (AI) systems, according to a report from Bloomberg. 

The European Commission, European Parliament and the various EU member states are said to be in discussions regarding the potential effects of large language models (LLMs), including Meta’s Llama 2 and OpenAI’s GPT-4, and possible additional restrictions to be imposed on them as a part of the forthcoming AI Act.

Bloomberg reports that sources close to the matter said the goal is not to overburden new startups with too many regulations while keeping larger models in check.

According to the sources, the agreement reached by negotiators on the topic is still in the preliminary stages.

The AI Act and the new proposed regulations for LLMs would be a similar approach to the matter as the EU’s Digital Services Act (DSA).

The DSA was recently implemented by EU lawmakers and makes it so platforms and websites have standards to protect user data and scan for illegal activities. However, the web’s largest platforms are subject to stricter controls.

Companies under this category like Alphabet Inc. and Meta Inc. had until Aug. 28 to update service practices to comply with the new EU standards.

Related: UNESCO and Netherlands design AI supervision project for the EU

The EU’s AI Act is posed to be one of the first set of mandatory rules for AI set in place by a Western government. China has already enacted its own set of AI regulations, which came into effect in August 2023. 

Under the EU’s AI regulations companies developing and deploying AI systems would need to perform risk assessments, label AI-generated content and are completely banned from the use of biometric surveillance, among other things.

However, the legislation has not been enacted yet and member states still have the ability to disagree with any of the proposals set forth by parliament.

In China, since the implementation of its AI laws, it has been reported that more than 70 new AI models have already been released.

Magazine: The Truth Behind Cuba’s Bitcoin Revolution: An on-the-ground report

Read Entire Article
spot_img

Related Posts

BTC-e Co-founder Enters Guilty Plea For $9 Billion Money Laundering Conspiracy

Co-founder of crypto exchange BTC-e, Alexander Vinnik, has pleaded guilty to charges of conspiracy to commit money laundering In a public release by the US Department of Justice (DOJ) on May 3, the

Top Analyst Predicts Bitcoin To Reach $150,000 In 2025 – Here’s Why

In the last week, Bitcoin has shown much resilience bouncing back above the $60,000 zone after a significant decline to below the $57,000 price zone As Bitcoin bulls gather momentum to possibly

Bitfinex CTO Dismisses Breach Claims as ‘Pure FUD,’ Says No Group Has Asked for Ransom

Paolo Ardoino, the chief technology officer of Bitfinex, has dismissed claims that Bitfinex has been breached as “pure FUD [fear, uncertainty and doubt]” A report by Shinoji Research

Bitfinex CTO Dispels FUD, Refutes Data Breach By Ransomware Group

In an interesting turn of events, Bitfinex chief technology officer (CTO) Paolo Ardoino has dismissed rumors of the exchange being involved in a large-scale data breach This came in response to

Uniswap Founder Shares His Two Cents On Good Token Distributions

Hayden Adams, founder of the Uniswap protocol, has shared his opinion on what characterizes a good distribution or rollout of a token In a recent post on the X platform, the prominent crypto figure

Nigeria Mulls Over Banning P2P Crypto Transactions; Labels Crypto Trading as National Security Concern

Nigerian authorities are reportedly planning to prohibit financial institutions from facilitating peer-to-peer cryptocurrency transactions According to a report, Nigeria’s Office of the National
- Advertisement -spot_img