With the full text of the EU AI Act made public, Truyo President Dan Clarke read through the Act in its entirety to identify key elements that will be crucial to compliance for organizations in scope. The Act includes the conventional components of transparency, privacy, education, security, non-discrimination, and risk assessment.
Where it differs from current and proposed AI legislation, according to Clarke, is in the tiered system and the different obligations for each level based on relative risk. “This comprehensive act applies to all companies utilizing or offering systems based on AI within the EU, regardless of origination or size. It is remarkably consistent with the White House executive order and subsequent blueprint for an AI bill of rights, including emphasis on safety and protection against discrimination/bias.”
Clarke posits, “From a commercial perspective, we expect the most common high-risk AI systems will be centered around education, security (facial recognition), and the employment/recruiting function, especially for multinationals based outside the EU. Unacceptable risk is centered around discrimination and bias, especially via subliminal or similar techniques applied to vulnerable or disadvantaged groups.”
The tiered system includes unacceptable and high risk. The unacceptable risk tier effectively bans social scoring and systems employing subliminal techniques beyond an individual’s consciousness to distort behavior, causing potential physical or psychological harm. The law also forbids the use of AI systems exploiting susceptibilities associated with age or physical or mental disability, leading to harm for individuals within those specific groups.
The Act defines the following tier as high-risk and prescribes obligations for companies engaged with high-risk systems, introducing the following requirements:
For high-risk AI systems, companies must provide users with comprehensive information about the system’s ownership, contact details, characteristics, limitations, performance metrics, and potential risks. This includes specifications for input data, changes to the system, human oversight measures, and expected lifetime with maintenance details. The development of such AI systems, especially those using model training, demands strict adherence to guidelines for quality datasets, considering design choices, biases, and specific user characteristics.
This demand for greater transparency and human oversight aims to enable users to understand and utilize outputs appropriately, with technical solutions required to address exposures like data poisoning and adversarial examples. “This regulation is a significant step, and I think most importantly launches terms like ‘responsible AI’ and ‘trustworthy AI’ to the front of our discussion. This is the true beginning of regulated AI governance,” says Clarke.
The EU AI Act emphasizes several ethical principles that align with its objectives and regulations. These principles are crucial for ensuring the responsible development, deployment, and use of AI systems. The key ethical principles compatible with the EU AI Act include:
These core principles reflect the EU AI Act’s commitment to fostering an AI ecosystem that is safe, trustworthy, and respects the fundamental rights and values of consumers. In next week’s blog we’ll outline best practices for conducting AI risk assessments in compliance with the EU AI Act. Click here to subscribe to Truyo’s AI Newsletter to get the latest on AI governance recommendations and regulatory updates.