A dialog with Dragoș Tudorache, the politician behind the AI Act

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A dialog with Dragoș Tudorache, the politician behind the AI Act


But Tudorache’s curiosity in AI began a lot earlier, in 2015. He says studying Nick Bostrom’s ebook Superintelligence, which explores how an AI superintelligence might be created and its implications, made him notice the potential and risks of AI, and the necessity for regulating it. (Bostrom has just lately been embroiled in a scandal for expressing racist views in emails unearthed from the ‘90s. Tudorache says he is not aware of Bostrom’s profession after the publication of the ebook, and didn’t remark.) 

When he was elected to the European Parliament in 2019, he says he arrived decided to work on AI regulation if the chance offered itself. 

“When I heard [Ursula] von der Leyen [the European Commission President] say in her first speech in front of Parliament that there will be AI regulation, I said ‘Whoo ha, this is my moment,’” Tudorache says. 

Since then, Tudorache has chaired a particular committee on AI, and shepherded the AI Act by way of the European Parliament and into its ultimate kind following negotiations with different EU establishments. 

It’s been a wild experience, with intense negotiations, the rise of ChatGPT, lobbying from tech firms, and a flip-flopping by a few of Europe’s largest economies. But now, because the AI Act has handed into legislation, Tudorache’s job on it’s accomplished and dusted, and he says he has no regrets. Although the AI Act has been criticized by each civil society for not defending human rights sufficient, and by business for being too restrictive, Tudorache says the invoice’s ultimate kind was the kind of compromise he anticipated. Politics is the artwork of compromise, in spite of everything. 

“There’s going to be a lot of building the plane while flying and there’s going to be a lot of learning while doing,” he says. “But if the true spirit of what we meant with legislation is well understood by all concerned, I do think that the outcome can be a positive one,” he provides. 

It continues to be early days—the legislation solely comes absolutely into pressure two years from now. But Tudorache believes it’s going to change the tech business for the higher, and can begin a course of the place firms will begin to take accountable AI significantly because of the Act’s legally binding obligations for AI AI firms to be extra clear about how their fashions are constructed. (I wrote in regards to the 5 issues you might want to know in regards to the AI Act a few months in the past right here.)

“The fact that we now have a blueprint for how you put the right boundaries, while also leaving room for innovation is something that will serve society,” says Tudorache. It may also serve companies, he says, as a result of it gives a predictable path ahead on what you’ll be able to and can’t do with AI. 

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