Features

Limits on machines

The EU and the UK are working on regulatory frameworks that they aim to turn into global benchmarks to control artificial intelligence

Anx­i­ety about ar­ti­fi­cial in­tel­li­gence is noth­ing new, but the British com­puter sci­en­tist Ge­of­frey Hin­ton, the ’God­fa­ther of AI’, has raised the level of alarm. In May, the 75-year-old left his Google job to be able to freely con­demn the dan­gers of a tech­nol­ogy he helped de­velop and which al­lows the gen­er­a­tion of con­tent on the basis of large amounts of ex­ist­ing dig­i­tal data.

Analysing its po­ten­tial, Hin­ton paints a scary pic­ture: the pos­si­bil­ity AI will sur­pass human in­tel­li­gence faster than ex­pected, that it will flood the In­ter­net with false in­for­ma­tion, that it will re­place ever more jobs, and even that it may end up de­vel­op­ing au­tonomous weapons, true “killer ro­bots”.

The night­mare of a dystopia is loom­ing in which ma­chines have their own goals that are dif­fer­ent from those of their human cre­ators. “These sys­tems do not have an eth­i­cal un­der­stand­ing, they have no sense of truth,” says AI ex­pert, Gary Mar­cus.

These warn­ings have mul­ti­plied since the emer­gence of Chat­GPT, AI soft­ware ca­pa­ble of hold­ing a con­ver­sa­tion with an in­ter­net user on a va­ri­ety of sub­jects. After this pro­gram was re­leased by the Ope­nAI com­pany last No­vem­ber, Google re­leased its own ver­sion of the chat­bot, Bard, four months later.

The chal­lenge is how to ben­e­fit from the ad­van­tages pro­vided by this rev­o­lu­tion­ary tech­nol­ogy, for med­ical di­ag­no­sis, for ex­am­ple, or eco­nomic pro­duc­tiv­ity or the fight against cli­mate change, while avoid­ing it be­com­ing harm­ful to so­ci­ety.

One of the main play­ers in putting lim­its on new tech­nol­ogy is the EU, which has new leg­is­la­tion to reg­u­late AI with the aim of guid­ing the po­lit­i­cal de­bate on the issue on a global scale. Mean­while, the White House re­cently brought to­gether the heads of major com­pa­nies work­ing on AI, while China has ap­proved a draft reg­u­la­tion re­quir­ing se­cu­rity as­sess­ments for all prod­ucts that use gen­er­a­tive AI sys­tems – such as Chat­GPT – be­fore they can be launched on the mar­ket.

Se­cure, trans­par­ent, trace­able

In the EU’s case, the Eu­ro­pean Par­lia­ment’s Com­mit­tee on In­ter­nal Mar­ket and Con­sumer Pro­tec­tion ap­proved its ver­sion of the pro­posed law on AI in May. MEPs want to en­sure that au­tonomous con­tent gen­er­a­tion sys­tems are su­per­vised by hu­mans, are se­cure, trans­par­ent, trace­able, non-dis­crim­i­na­tory and en­vi­ron­men­tally friendly.

The leg­is­la­tion pro­hibits real-time mass sur­veil­lance sys­tems in pub­lic spaces - ex­cept to pre­vent crime - and bans mod­els that use sub­lim­i­nal tech­niques to “sub­stan­tially” alter a per­son’s be­hav­iour with­out their knowl­edge. In ad­di­tion, it qual­i­fies as high risk a se­ries of AI sys­tems with very spe­cific uses that can only be in­tro­duced on the mar­ket if they re­spect the EU’s basic rights and val­ues. For ex­am­ple, those that could be used to in­flu­ence an elec­tion, or that fi­nan­cial in­sti­tu­tions use to as­sess a per­son’s credit rat­ing, for ex­am­ple. The law also fore­sees big fines for com­pa­nies if they breach the reg­u­la­tions. The ple­nary of the Eu­ro­pean Par­lia­ment passed the pro­posal in July and will next ne­go­ti­ate the final ver­sion with the Com­mis­sion and the Coun­cil of the EU.

Mean­while, the UK passed a white paper on AI in March. Lon­don is look­ing for more flex­i­ble and less strict reg­u­la­tions than those in the EU with the aim of strik­ing a bal­ance be­tween pub­lic con­fi­dence and at the same time help­ing com­pa­nies grow and cre­ate jobs. The UK’s aim is to cre­ate a reg­u­la­tory frame­work that is also more at­trac­tive to US com­pa­nies than that of the EU and that will also serve as an ex­am­ple for a global ap­proach.

Fea­ture Tech­nol­ogy

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