In other news, they also regulated that knives must be designed to prevent stabbing people, and guns must be designed to only shoot bad guys.
Comment on EU agrees to landmark rules on artificial intelligence
GigglyBobble@kbin.social 11 months agoDesigning the model to prevent it from generating illegal content
Yeah, good luck designing that.
theterrasque@infosec.pub 11 months ago
PinkPanther@sh.itjust.works 11 months ago
The law matters doesn’t even know what how the internet works, and they’re supposed to write the laws around it? Sounds like your general politicians.
Humanius@lemmy.world 11 months ago
I can mostly find myself agreeing (or at least not having big issues with) with all of the points, except for that one.
Let’s just hope they mean a best effort, rather than outright preventing it in the first place.
barsoap@lemm.ee 11 months ago
That’s the Parliament wishlist, not the actual text of the law. (At least I think that’s the version that got passed).
Stuff like that is why it’s a good idea parliamentarians aren’t drafting stuff, but an army of technocrats. It’s all too easy to vote in a training requirement into a section about transparency when it’s 1 o’clock in the evening and you and everyone else in the committee wants to go home.
Here’s the transparency article:
Most of the AI uses out there only have these very limited requirements mostly around transparency. There’s some stuff about training in the Article 2 listing outlawed practices, e.g. you may not train models to be subliminal.
All in all I’d say as a first of its kind, the law is pretty darn good, in particular that it classifies requirements for systems not by technology employed, but by their area of application.
SuckMyFingerKFC@fanaticus.social 11 months ago
No way someone is reading this wall of text lol
barsoap@lemm.ee 11 months ago
Speak about yourself.