Consumer groups in Europe are urging authorities to protect consumers against the risks of generative AI, like ChatGPT.
On Tuesday, the European Consumer Organization (BEUC), representing consumer groups from 13 European countries, published a call to action, citing generative AI's ability to spread disinformation, entrench bias and discrimination, and create scams.
SEE ALSO: OpenAI sued for defamation after ChatGPT allegedly fabricated fake embezzlement claimsThe BEUC's statement comes on the heels of the European Union's approval of the AI Act, which seeks to define and classify various forms of AI and their risks, so they can be regulated accordingly.
If passed, the EU AI Act would be the world's first collection of laws directly targeting AI. But the BEUC believes European consumers need protection from existing laws in the meantime.
"We call on safety, data and consumer protection authorities to start investigations now and not wait idly for all kinds of consumer harm to have happened before they take action," said Ursula Pachl, Deputy Director General of the BEUC. "These laws apply to all products and services, be they AI-powered or not and authorities must enforce them."
The announcement coincides with the publication of a report from BEUC member Forbrukerrådet, called Ghost in the Machine: Addressing the consumer harms of generative AI. The report outlines the harms generative AI could inflict on consumers including, concentration of Big Tech power, the creation and proliferation of deepfakes, bias in training data, privacy risks, job replacement from automation, and environmental impact.
The EU has been a global leader in enforcing digital protections for consumers and cultivating a business-friendly environment. In 2020, it passed the Digital Markets Act, aimed at tackling Big Tech gatekeeping and giving users more choice over the technologies they can use. Addressing the EU AI Act, Pachl said, "It's crucial that the EU makes this law as watertight as possible to protect consumers."
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Generative AI risks: EU consumer group calls for 'urgent investigation'-额手相庆网
sitemap
文章
35
浏览
641
获赞
6187
Prince Harry is 'over the moon' after Meghan Markle gives birth to a baby boy
The royal family has officially welcomed a new member.On Monday, the @sussexroyal Instagram accountAnother Roomba ran over dog poop and then proceeded to 'clean' the house
Here's something that might keep you from buying a Roomba on Prime Day.On Sunday, a man named Ryan LThese are the coolest foldable devices confirmed for launch in 2020
All the way back in 2019, a few tech companies decided the world really needed phones with bendableMarianne Williamson tells kid reporter her cat died
Marianne Williamson is a lot of things: Democratic presidential candidate, spiritual advisor to OpraTheresa May attempts Brexit explainer video, gets meme'd into oblivion
This was only ever going to end one way, wasn't it?On Sunday afternoon, UK Prime Minister Theresa Ma11 of the wildest bottle cap challenges
This summer's challenge has everyone kicking the caps off bottles in the wildest way possible.WhileThe cost of Avast's Free Antivirus: Companies can spy on your clicks
Your antivirus should protect you, but what if it's handing over your browser history to a major marWhat we really want to see at CES 2020
When it comes to CES, there are a few things that will always be true: the TVs will get bigger and tTwoSeven review: Group streaming for all of your favorite services
The search for the perfect group streaming service for the age of social distancing isn't over, butInstagram can't stop flood of grisly photos from Bianca Devins' murder
Instagram users are stepping up to stanch the flow of photos showing a popular teen e-girl's murderFacebook official struggles to explain Bezos' WhatsApp hack
Facebook's top policy official, Nick Clegg, has weighed in on the Jeff Bezos/WhatsApp hack, and he wJulia Weldon on new opportunities for non
Every day ofPride Month, Mashable will be sharing illuminating conversations with members of the LGBFitbit has developed a ventilator to help COVID
Just like Dyson and NASA before it, Fitbit has now designed a ventilator in response to the coronavi'INeedToLeaveNYC' shows how living in NYC can be a mess of contradictions
"Happy hour" drinks that cost $25. Missing the C train by one second and having to wait 30 minutes u17 Android Apps Caught Hiding and Displaying Aggressive Ads
We all rely on Apple and Google to keep malicious software out of its app stores, but the vetting sy