Everyone in the real world hated the GDPR, so Europe quadrupled down with the Data Markets, Services and Governance Acts. But the real masterpiece is the upcoming AI Act. What would we do without the untiring Bureaucrats of Brussels?
REGULATION
-
AI Models and the Need for On-Chain Fact-Checking Solutions
By
–
This AI model will generate so many fake news… We'll need either on-chain fact-checkers or on-chain news media. https://
arxiv.org/abs/2210.09276 -
AI Bot to Secretly Assist Defendant in US Courtroom February Experiment
By
–
In February, an #AI experiment will secretly happen in a US courtroom. While a violation of protocol, a bot will run on a smartphone, listen to speech in the room, and instruct a defendant on what to say via an earpiece. #ArtificialIntelligence #lawyer
-
ChatGPT Banned in NYC Schools Over Learning and Safety Concerns
By
–
And now #ChatGPT is banned in @NYCSchools due to “concerns about negative impacts on student learning, and concerns regarding the safety and accuracy of content.” https://
wsj.com/articles/chatg
pt-banned-in-new-york-city-public-schools-over-concerns-about-cheating-learning-development-11673024059
… -
Company Faces Criticism for Alleged GDPR Non-Compliance
By
–
“This is not just unfair but clearly illegal,” Schrems said. “We are not aware of any other company that has tried to ignore the GDPR in such an arrogant way."
-
China becomes case study for generative AI regulation rules
By
–
In this way, China on Tuesday will become the largest case study of how such rules might work in practice and affect platforms and generative AI providers, according to @gwbstr
. “People around the world should observe what happens,” he said. -
Generative AI Best Practices to Prevent Deepfake Crisis
By
–
Both these provisions are in line with global emerging best practices on how to continue using generative AI tools without creating a deepfake crisis.
-
China Requires AI-Generated Content Labeling and Digital Watermarking
By
–
What's more interesting is that China's rules also require providers of deep synthesis technologies to visibly label AI-generated content when it could be misconstrued as real. Providers should digitally watermark the content as well so it's easier for platforms to trace.
-
China’s AI-Generated Content Ban Extends Existing Censorship Practices
By
–
China doesn't have that concern. Its new rules simply ban the use of AI-generated content for spreading "fake news," which is ill-defined and gives authorities wide latitude. But this isn't surprising. This merely extends Beijing's existing censorship to a new form of speech.
-
Governments Regulate Deepfakes While Balancing Free Speech
By
–
These capabilities have alarmed governments globally—and both U.S. and E.U. regulators have sought to curb the abuse of deepfakes. Of the two, the E.U. is further along, but both are similarly concerned about striking a balance with free speech.