EU nears deal to regulate AI technology in landmark act

Negotiators have agreed to a set of controls for generative artificial intelligence tools

New regulations in the EU will govern the use of technology such as ChatGPT. Photograph: Kirill Kudryavtsev/AFP
New regulations in the EU will govern the use of technology such as ChatGPT. Photograph: Kirill Kudryavtsev/AFP

The European Union is nearing a deal on what is poised to become the most extensive and wide-reaching regulation of artificial intelligence in the western world.

Negotiators have agreed to a set of controls for generative artificial intelligence tools such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Google’s Bard — the kind capable of producing content on command, people familiar the discussions said early Thursday.

Delegates from the European Commission, the European Parliament and 27 member countries reached the compromise in a meeting that began Wednesday afternoon and has dragged on for hours, bringing the group closer to a formal agreement over a broader piece of legislation known as the AI Act, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the talks aren’t public.

A deal marks a critical step in clearing landmark AI policy that will — in the absence of any meaningful action by US Congress — set the tone for the regulation of generative AI tools such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Google’s Bard in the developed world. Policymakers have been working for months to finalise the language in the AI Act and get it passed before European elections in June usher in a whole new commission and parliament that could force more changes and stall efforts.

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The European Commission didn’t respond to a request for comment sent outside of regular business hours.

The extensive, late-into-the-night discussions underscore how contentious the debate over regulating AI has become, dividing world leaders and tech executives alike as generative tools continue explode in popularity. The EU — like other governments including the US and UK — has struggled to find a balance between the need to protect its own AI startups, such as France’s Mistral AI and Germany’s Aleph Alpha, against potential societal risks.

That has proven to be a key sticking point in negotiations, with some countries including France and Germany opposing rules that they said would unnecessarily handicap local companies. Officials were growing increasingly confident that a deal would be reached early Thursday, though the technical details of the act would still need to be hammered out in a series of follow-up meetings.

EU policymakers had proposed a plan that would require developers of the type of AI models that underpin tools such as ChatGPT to maintain information on how their models are trained, summarise the copyrighted material used and label AI-generated content. Systems that pose “systemic risks” would have to work with the commission through an industry code of conduct. They would also have to monitor and report any incidents from the models. - Bloomberg