EU lawmakers fear general purpose AI like ChatGPT has already outsmarted regulators
Legislators from the European Parliament believe new laws are needed to regulate general purpose AI systems such as OpenAI's ChatGPT, as the technology is unpredictable and progressing faster than expected.
A group of 12 lawmakers are working on the European Union's AI Act, which they describe as"a risk-based legislative tool, meant to cover specific high-risk use-cases of AI." But as they worked on the bill they reached a"conviction that we also need a complementary set of preliminary rules for the development and deployment of powerful General Purpose AI Systems that can be easily adapted to a multitude of purposes.
"The recent advent of and widespread public access to powerful AI, alongside the exponential performance improvements over the last year of AI trained to generate complex content, has prompted us to pause and reflect on our work," the missive states. The letter lands as regulators in the West increase efforts to manage AI. Italy, France, Canada, and Spain have launched investigations into OpenAI's ChatGPT due to data privacy concerns and Italy's Guarantor for the Protection of Personal Data has temporarily blocked access to the AI chatbot, and
South Africa Latest News, South Africa Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
OpenAI CEO confirms company is not currently training GPT-5Plus: Elon Musk wants Twitter to develop generative AI, and ChatGPT bots are flooding Reddit
Read more »
BGT judges disgusted after act's 'disrespectful' performanceThey couldn't believe it
Read more »
First BGT Golden Buzzer Act Confirmed After Bruno Tonioli Does Something Never Done BeforeSimon Cowell described the unique moment as “magical”, as the ITV talent show returned on Saturday night.
Read more »
Britain's Got Talent fans complain over 'disturbing' man on fire actBritain's Got Talent fans complain over 'disturbing' man on fire act as they say 'this has no place on family viewing'
Read more »