
This year, the EU approved the world s first comprehensive rules to govern AI systems like ChatGPT. AFP
This year, the EU approved the world's first comprehensive rules to govern AI, compelling systems like OpenAI's ChatGPT after long, intense negotiations.
First proposed in 2021, the bloc raced to get the law in the books after ChatGPT burst onto the scene in 2022, leaving users stunned by its ability to churn out coherent text including poems within seconds.
"The AI Office aims at enabling the future development, deployment, and use of AI in a way that fosters societal and economic benefits and innovation while mitigating risks," the European Commission said.
The 140-member AI Office will be established within the commission, which is the EU's executive arm and acts as the bloc's powerful tech regulator.
"The Office will foster a European AI ecosystem that is innovative, competitive, and respectful of EU rules and values," the EU's top tech enforcer, Thierry Breton, said.
The EU's law known as the "AI Act" has tougher rules for general-purpose AI systems such as ChatGPT and takes a risk-based approach to the technology.
The higher the risk to Europeans' rights or health, for example, the greater the systems' obligations to protect individuals from harm.
"Together with developers and a scientific community, the office will evaluate and test general purpose AI to ensure that AI serves us as humans and upholds our European values," commission executive vice president Margrethe Vestager said.
Companies will have to comply with the EU's law by 2026, but rules covering AI models like ChatGPT will apply 12 months after the law becomes official.
The EU's announcement came on the same day that EU auditors criticized the commission for failing to sufficiently invest in AI to achieve the bloc's ambitions.
"Going forward, stronger governance and more, and better targeted, public and private investment in the EU will be paramount if the EU is to achieve its AI ambitions," the bloc's spending watchdog said.
But the commission defended the bloc's record and said it was investing more than one billion euros ($1.1 billion) annually in AI research projects under different schemes.
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