The complete picture on AI regulation, with global insights from MLex®
As regulators world-wide grapple with the impact of artificial intelligence on all sectors, MLex correspondents continue to bring subscribers specialist news and predictive insights from North America, Europe, the UK and Asia-Pacific―with highlights from the beginning of February including:
Select a territory for insight
United Kingdom
Companies developing generative AI systems need more "steer" from regulators as their technology evolves, a report by a committee of UK lawmakers said today. The government should avoid any catastrophizing and focus on promoting innovation, evading regulatory capture, and resolving emerging competition and copyright problems. If the UK does not adjust its regulatory approach, it could miss out on the opportunities brought by AI, they worried.
United States
With the US Federal Trade Commission ordering companies to delete algorithms and data because of privacy violations, companies planning to launch AI products need to carefully weigh regulatory risks against the benefits of those products, experts agreed at a key legal gathering in New York this week. A new FTC order today underscored that regulatory risk.
Europe
The EU’s landmark artificial intelligence law today moved closer to final approval, after passing a key legislative stage. Ambassadors representing EU national governments signed off on the final version of the legislation, after weeks of doubts that it would pass muster with France and Germany. The agreement was unanimous, a spokesman for the Belgian government said. The European Parliament will also vote on it in the coming weeks.
Australia
Excessive regulation could make the Australian market undesirable for international artificial intelligence developers, the country’s chief economic advisory agency warned. This week, the Productivity Commission published three papers on Australia’s AI opportunity and regulation. The papers emphasize the need to reduce the size and likelihood of harm from AI to acceptable levels without imposing an “excessive regulatory burden on society.”
MLex
Prepare for tomorrow's regulatory change, today.
Guest articles from MLex: The specialist news and analysis you need to stay ahead of fast-moving regulatory shifts in the UK and across the globe.