Google owner calls for 'proportionate approach' to AI
regulation
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[January 20, 2020]
By Foo Yun Chee and John Chalmers
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Sundar Pichai, the CEO
of Google-owner Alphabet, urged regulators on Monday to take a
"proportionate approach" when drafting rules for artificial intelligence
(AI), days before the European Commission is due to publish proposals on
the issue.
Regulators are grappling with ways to govern AI, aiming to encourage
innovation while curbing potential misuse, as companies and law
enforcement agencies increasingly adopt the technology.
Pichai said there was no question AI needs to be regulated, but that
rulemakers should tread carefully.
"Sensible regulation must also take a proportionate approach, balancing
potential harms with social opportunities. This is especially true in
areas that are high risk and high value," he said in prepared remarks
for a conference in Brussels organized by think tank Bruegel.
Regulators should tailor rules according to different sectors, Pichai
said, citing medical devices and self-driving cars as examples that
require different rules.
He also called on governments to align their rules and agree on core
values.
The European Commission is taking a tougher line on AI than the United
States, aiming to strengthen existing regulations that protect
Europeans' privacy and data rights, according to an 18-page proposal
paper seen by Reuters.
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Sundar Pichai, CEO of Google and Alphabet, speaks on artificial
intelligence during a Bruegel think tank conference in Brussels,
Belgium January 20, 2020. REUTERS/Yves Herman
Earlier this month, the U.S. government published regulatory guidelines on AI
aimed at limiting authorities' overreach and urged Europe to avoid an aggressive
approach.
Pichai said it was important to be clear-eyed about what could go wrong with AI
and that while it promised huge benefits there were real concerns about
potential negative consequences.
One area of concern is so-called "deep fakes" - video and audio clips that have
been manipulated using AI. Pichai said Google had released open datasets to help
the research community build better tools to detect such fakes.
Another concern is facial recognition technology, which Pichai said could be
used for "nefarious reasons".
Google Cloud is not offering general-purpose facial recognition application
programming interfaces (APIs) while it establishes policy and technical
safeguards, he said.
(Editing by Mark Potter)
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