EU vice-president and competition and digital commissioner Margrethe Vestager. Photo: Adrian Weckler |
The European Union is likely to reach a political agreement this year that will pave the way for the world's first major artificial intelligence (AI) law, the bloc's tech regulation chief, Margrethe Vestager, said on Sunday.
This follows a preliminary deal reached on Thursday by
members of the European Parliament to push through the draft of the EU's
Artificial Intelligence Act to a vote on May 11. Parliament will then thrash
out the bill's final details with EU member states and the European Commission
before it becomes law.
At a press conference after a Group of Seven digital
ministers' meeting in Takasaki, Japan, Vestager said the EU AI Act was
"pro-innovation" since it seeks to mitigate the risks of societal
damage from emerging technologies.
Regulators around the world have been trying to find a
balance where governments could develop "guardrails" on emerging
artificial intelligence technology without stifling innovation.
"The reason why we have these guardrails for high-risk
use cases is that cleaning up … after a misuse by AI would be so much more
expensive and damaging than the use case of AI in itself," Vestager said.
While the EU AI Act is expected to be passed by this year,
lawyers have said it will take a few years for it to be enforced. But Vestager
said businesses could start considering the implication of the new legislation.
"There was no reason to hesitate and to wait for the
legislation to be passed to accelerate the necessary discussions to provide the
changes in all the systems where AI will have an enormous influence," she
told Reuters in an interview.
While research on AI has been going on for years, the sudden
popularity of generative AI applications such as OpenAI'S ChatGPT and
Midjourney have led to a scramble by lawmakers to find ways to regulate any
uncontrolled growth.
An organization backed by Elon Musk and European lawmakers
involved in drafting the EU AI Act are among those to have called for world
leaders to collaborate to find ways to stop advanced AI from creating
disruptions.
Digital ministers of the G-7 advanced nations on Sunday also
agreed to adopt "risk-based" regulation on AI, among the first steps
that could lead to global agreements on how to regulate AI.
"It is important that our democracy paved the way and
put in place the rules to protect us from its abusive manipulation – AI should
be useful but it shouldn’t be manipulating us," said German Transport
Minister Volker Wissing.
This year's G-7 meeting was also attended by representatives
from Indonesia, India and Ukraine.