G7 approves draft regulatory guidelines on artificial intelligence

The G7 countries have arrived Principle of agreement regarding the guidelines that will be established Regulating use and development Artificial Intelligence (AI). The goal of the G7 is Reduce potential risks Because of this kind of technological innovation.

At the top of the organization Last May in Hiroshima Under the Japanese presidency of the G7, the leaders of the seven countries agreed to launch it Working Group To avoid problems such as misinformation Or violate rights such as privacy or intellectual property.

Responsible for the Ministries of the Interior and Communications of Germany, Canada, the United States, France, Italy, Japan and the United Kingdom He wrote a draft From the document in Informal meeting It was held last week in Kyoto in cooperation with Internet Governance Forum of the United Nations within Operation Hiroshima AI, according to Ivey.

Organization and supervision mechanisms

At that summit, the G7 countries highlighted the “need” to establish this zone Regulated mechanisms To manage artificial intelligence and Generative techniques Like the chatbot ChatGPT, I decided to prepare proposals by the end of the year Individually Which are then collected for this purpose.

It includes the draft agreement reached in Kyoto Eleven guiding principlesAmong them is the necessity of obtaining Third party supervision In the development stage of artificial intelligence systems, or the need to take action and creativity Protection mechanisms intellectual property.

It is also conceivable that we could ask developers to do so hazard identification And potential security breaches The first stage their systems, or create digital “watermarks” that allow this Select text, images or videos generated by artificial intelligence.

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These principles are expected to aim Research centers and private companies, Be supportive By the relevant G7 ministers and during a Virtual summit The leaders’ conference is scheduled for the coming months, according to Japanese newspaper Yomiuri.

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