Post by account_disabled on Mar 9, 2024 0:13:08 GMT -5
Unfortunately, not at the epicenter of AI development, but at its regulatory demarcation" 1 December, 2023 Blog The Confideinitial, Artificial Intelligence / Artificial Intelligence, News, European Union What has happened in recent weeks in the artificial intelligence sector can undoubtedly serve to write a season of a series on a video-on-demand platform. The founder and CEO of the most representative artificial intelligence company in the world Is fired, then hired by Microsoft with part of his team and five days later is restored again in office to avoid public embarrassment (and the loss of billions of dollars of market capitalization). In parallel, the Commission of the European Union, the Council and Parliament meet in trilogues to move forward with the Artificial Intelligence Regulation, the first transversal standard in the world that aims to establish basic rules for this technology. The regulation process, which has had to be substantially revised due to the new generation of AI, to contemplate the foundational models and generative tools, it has become complicated at the same time as the technology that aims to regulate, with plot twists typical of a work by Aaron Sorkin. At national headquarters, the news has been in the approval of the Royal Decree or the regulation of a controlled testing environment for trial of compliance with the proposed AI Regulation, that is, a sandbox where to experience tools based on artificial intelligence.
This norm, which has inevitably gone unnoticed due to the media concentration of OpenAI and the trilogues, seeks to place Spain, unfortunately not at the epicenter of AI development, but at that of its regulatory demarcation. The Royal Decree respects the anthropocentric vision that we have of AI in the European Union, which it has been contagious, at least in appearance, to other traditionally more technocentric territories, such as the US or Japan. The standard implemented by the Spanish Government, according to the Explanatory Memorandum with the collaboration of the European Commission, aims to USA Phone Number establish the basic parameters of said testing environment which, following other previous ones for sectors such as finance or insurance, aims allow AI providers and users to guarantee respect for the fundamental rights of citizens. On a more descriptive level, the Royal Decree addresses high risk AI systems (according to the IA Regulation, those that carry a high risk to the health and safety or fundamental rights of natural persons), to general purpose AI systems (which do not currently exist and promise to have learning capabilities similar to humans) and the foundational models (who are the invisible protagonists of this generation of AI, architects of its surprising performance.
Soon, the General Subdirectorate of Artificial Intelligence and Digital Enabling Technologies must publish a call to which developers and users of these AI systems can apply, in which certain characteristics will be taken into , or, above all, for the demonstration of the compliance with the strictest standards at the legal and ethical level of the use of AI. Unfortunately, neither Spain nor the European Union is dominating the technological development of these intelligent systems, seeming to be content with being the ones who establish their regulatory standards, in a manner analogous to what has happened in other digital areas, such as data protection. Leading is only possible thanks to regulation in highly regulated industries (such as the financial or gaming sector); is not the caso of AI, which needs a regulatory framework that reduces its potential risks, but, above all, requires strong investments, talent and an entrepreneurial ecosystem, which is what we should promote in the European Union. Article originally published in the Blog Fide in ElConfideinitial.
This norm, which has inevitably gone unnoticed due to the media concentration of OpenAI and the trilogues, seeks to place Spain, unfortunately not at the epicenter of AI development, but at that of its regulatory demarcation. The Royal Decree respects the anthropocentric vision that we have of AI in the European Union, which it has been contagious, at least in appearance, to other traditionally more technocentric territories, such as the US or Japan. The standard implemented by the Spanish Government, according to the Explanatory Memorandum with the collaboration of the European Commission, aims to USA Phone Number establish the basic parameters of said testing environment which, following other previous ones for sectors such as finance or insurance, aims allow AI providers and users to guarantee respect for the fundamental rights of citizens. On a more descriptive level, the Royal Decree addresses high risk AI systems (according to the IA Regulation, those that carry a high risk to the health and safety or fundamental rights of natural persons), to general purpose AI systems (which do not currently exist and promise to have learning capabilities similar to humans) and the foundational models (who are the invisible protagonists of this generation of AI, architects of its surprising performance.
Soon, the General Subdirectorate of Artificial Intelligence and Digital Enabling Technologies must publish a call to which developers and users of these AI systems can apply, in which certain characteristics will be taken into , or, above all, for the demonstration of the compliance with the strictest standards at the legal and ethical level of the use of AI. Unfortunately, neither Spain nor the European Union is dominating the technological development of these intelligent systems, seeming to be content with being the ones who establish their regulatory standards, in a manner analogous to what has happened in other digital areas, such as data protection. Leading is only possible thanks to regulation in highly regulated industries (such as the financial or gaming sector); is not the caso of AI, which needs a regulatory framework that reduces its potential risks, but, above all, requires strong investments, talent and an entrepreneurial ecosystem, which is what we should promote in the European Union. Article originally published in the Blog Fide in ElConfideinitial.