First international AI safety treaty signed by U.S., Britain, and EU aims to protect human rights

The first legally binding international AI treaty will be open for signing on Thursday by the countries that negotiated it, including European Union members, the United States, and Britain, the Council of Europe human rights organization said.

The AI Convention, which has been in the works for years and was adopted in May after discussions between 57 countries, addresses the risks AI may pose, while promoting responsible innovation.

“This Convention is a major step to ensuring that these new technologies can be harnessed without eroding our oldest values, like human rights and the rule of law,” Britain’s justice minister, Shabana Mahmood, said in a statement.

The AI Convention mainly focuses on the protection of human rights of people affected by AI systems and is separate from the EU AI Act, which entered into force last month.

The EU’s AI Act entails comprehensive regulations on the development, deployment, and use of AI systems within the EU internal market.

The Council of Europe, founded in 1949, is an international organization distinct from the EU with a mandate to safeguard human rights; 46 countries are members, including all the 27 EU member states.

An ad hoc committee in 2019 started examining the feasibility of an AI framework convention and a Committee on Artificial Intelligence was formed in 2022, which drafted and negotiated the text.

The signatories can choose to adopt or maintain legislative, administrative, or other measures to give effect to the provisions.

Francesca Fanucci, a legal expert at ECNL (European Center for Not-for-Profit Law Stichting) who contributed to the treaty’s drafting process alongside other civil society groups, told Reuters the agreement had been “watered down” into a broad set of principles.

“The formulation of principles and obligations in this convention is so overbroad and fraught with caveats that it raises serious questions about their legal certainty and effective enforceability,” she said.

Fanucci highlighted exemptions on AI systems used for national security purposes, and limited scrutiny of private companies versus the public sector, as flaws. “This double standard is disappointing,” she added.

The U.K. government said it would work with regulators, the devolved administrations, and local authorities to ensure it can appropriately implement its new requirements.

(This story has been corrected to fix the number of Council of Europe member countries to 46, not 47, in paragraph 6)

—Rishabh Jaiswal, Supantha Mukherjee, and Martin Coulter, Reuters


https://www.fastcompany.com/91185178/ai-first-international-safety-human-rights-treaty-signed-us-britain-eu?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Établi 10mo | 5 sept. 2024, 22:10:01


Connectez-vous pour ajouter un commentaire

Autres messages de ce groupe

Jack Dorsey’s new Sun Day app tells you exactly how long to tan before you burn

Twitter cofounder Jack Dorsey is back with a new app that tracks sun exposure and vitamin D levels.

Sun Day uses location-based data to show the current UV index, the day’s high, and add

15 juil. 2025, 21:10:06 | Fast company - tech
The CEO of Ciena on how AI is fueling a global subsea cable boom

Under the ocean’s surface lies the true backbone of the internet: an estimated

15 juil. 2025, 18:50:04 | Fast company - tech
AI therapy chatbots are unsafe and stigmatizing, a new Stanford study finds

AI chatbot therapists have made plenty of headlines in recent months—s

15 juil. 2025, 18:50:03 | Fast company - tech
Elon Musk’s chatbot Grok searches for his views before answering questions

The latest version of Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence chatbot Grok is echoing the views of its

15 juil. 2025, 16:30:06 | Fast company - tech
How this Florida county is using new 911 technology to save lives

When an emergency happens in Collier County, Florida, the

15 juil. 2025, 16:30:05 | Fast company - tech
How a ‘Shark Tank’-winning neuroscientist invented the bionic hand that stole the show at Comic-Con

A gleaming Belle from Beauty and the Beast glided along the exhibition floor at last year’s San Diego Comic-Con adorned in a yellow corseted gown with cascading satin folds. She could bare

15 juil. 2025, 14:20:03 | Fast company - tech
Why 1995 was the year the internet grew up

The internet wasn’t born whole—it came together from parts. Most know of ARPANET, the internet’s most famous precursor, but it was always limited strictly to government use. It was NSFNET that bro

15 juil. 2025, 11:50:03 | Fast company - tech