Artificial intelligence regulations are at an early stage, and some typical areas of enforcement, such as copyright or antitrust, will take some time to develop, in the former case because a sufficient body of precedent from prior cases must develop; in the latter case because markets will not be developed enough to make commercial power determinations.
In the meantime, regulators seem to be focusing on the procedural areas: consumer safety (AI use for autonomous vehicles); privacy (when facial recognition can be used) ; security (use of personal data); transparency (how models have used training data); algorithmic bias; or liability (who is responsible if harm occurs?). But we remain early in those processes as well.
Area of Interest | Description | Example Regulations |
Safety and Security | Focuses on mitigating risks associated with AI systems, such as malfunctions, biases, and security vulnerabilities. | Mandates for robust testing and safety assessments of high-risk AI systems. - Regulations on the use of AI in critical infrastructure or autonomous vehicles. |
Privacy | Protects individual privacy rights in the context of AI data collection, use, and decision-making. | Alignment with existing data privacy laws (e.g., GDPR, CCPA). - Restrictions on AI systems that use personal data for profiling or decision-making. |
Transparency and Explainability | Aims to make AI systems more transparent and understandable, allowing for human oversight and accountability. | Requirements for developers to disclose how AI systems function and the data they use. - Right to explanation for individuals impacted by AI-driven decisions. |
Algorithmic Bias | Addresses the potential for bias in AI algorithms due to training data or design choices. | Regulations on fairness and non-discrimination in AI algorithms used for hiring, loan approvals, etc. - Auditing of AI systems to identify and mitigate bias. |
Liability and Accountability | Defines who is responsible for the actions and decisions of AI systems, particularly in cases of harm. | Clarification on liability for accidents or errors caused by autonomous AI systems. - Establishment of responsible actors in the AI development and deployment process. |
Intellectual Property | Addresses ownership and rights related to AI creations (e.g., inventions, copyright in creative outputs). | Clarification on patentability of AI-generated inventions. - Determination of authorship rights for creative content produced by AI. |
Some of us remain skeptical about government ability to usefully regulate important and profound new technologies, so hopefully overreach will not happen.
Title | Authors | Publication | Key Takeaways |
The Myth of the Digital Regulatory State | Sheila A. Brennan & Michael J. Meurer | Virginia Journal of Law & Technology | Argues that rapid technological change outpaces traditional regulatory frameworks. - Regulations often struggle to keep up with the evolving nature of new technologies. |
Regulating Artificial Intelligence: A Multi-Stakeholder Approach | Daniel W. Drezner | Global Policy | Highlights the complexity of AI and the difficulty in defining and addressing potential risks. - Suggests a multi-stakeholder approach involving governments, industry, and civil society. |
Can Technology Be Governed? | David Kaye & Debbie Sykes | Daedalus | Discusses the challenges of applying traditional governance structures to complex, globalized technologies. - Raises concerns about democratic control and potential for censorship. |
The Innovation Paradox: How Global Governance Fails to Catch Up with Technological Change | Robert Falkner | Brookings Institution | Examines how rapid innovation creates challenges for international cooperation on regulation. - Suggests the need for more flexible and adaptable regulatory approaches.
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The Case for Algorithmic Regulation | Daniel Kreutzfeldt | Oxford Internet Institute | Proposes a focus on algorithmic decision-making processes rather than specific technologies. - Argues for transparency and accountability in algorithms used by companies and governments. |
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