"There is No Time to Waste" on making laws for AI Says EU Vice President
Artificial Intelligence is emerging as one of the most important fields of making research and leaders like the EU Vice President also supporting further development in AI instead of making any laws that are totally useless.
Highlights
- The newly launched ChatGPT proved to be capable to pass some of the toughest exams
- The AI-based ChatGPT only functions if it is trained on a vast dataset
- Italy for current of now banned the ChatGPT
European Union still supports the development in the field of artificial intelligence and also there is no possibility to waste time on the things like making laws that can regulate the use and development of intelligence.
“There is no time to waste” on making laws to regulate the use of Artificial Intelligence said, Vestager in Berlin. In the early stage of the use of AI in the world, the EU put forward a regulatory proposal in early 2021, but progress in making laws became slow.
Further said “What I think is important is speed. We really need our legislation to get in place,” Vestager stated.
“I really hope that we can have the first meeting of the political negotiation before summer so that we can end it this year.”
Today the development and research in the area of Artificial Intelligence have surged as the recently arrived ChatGPT has reinvigorated the debate over the regulation and spurred a response from the officials of government.
It has the ability to generate the Essays, poems, and conversations with the help of the data set it has inside the programming and it also needs the prompt given by the humans. It has also cleared many toughest exams which shows its capability.
Italy temporarily banned the program in March over allegations that the AI-based model is using various data and broke laws based on privacy. The decision also raised the discussion on the French and German regulators to probe into it.
“When it comes to artificial intelligence like ChatGPT it will also be caught by the (EU’s) AI Act.” Said Vestager.