Computer & Communication Industry Association
PublishedOctober 23, 2023

AI Act: CCIA Europe Warns Against Asymmetric Regulation Ahead of Next EU Trilogue

Ahead of the next round of trilogue negotiations on the EU’s Artificial Intelligence (AI) Act, the Computer & Communications Industry Associations (CCIA Europe) sent a letter to the Spanish Presidency and the European Parliament’s negotiating team.

With only a short time left to reach a deal, CCIA Europe believes the EU co-legislators should avoid undermining the Act’s original risk-based approach by suddenly introducing an expansive asymmetric approach to regulate foundation models and general-purpose AI (GPAI).

As the letter makes clear, the AI Act should not include any asymmetric obligations that inappropriately target a few providers or models, irrespective of risk or use.

“It is still very early days for AI technology, and rapid developments are yet to come. The market is already fundamentally different than one year ago with many new players and great leaps in what AI can do. Any asymmetric regulation is likely to become outdated within a few years, if not months.”

“There are clear examples that smaller AI models, and models from smaller companies, can have the same or higher impact as larger models and companies. It all depends on how they are used, not necessarily by whom. There is simply no evidence of any correlation between these risks and the size of providers.”

News

Tech Industry Welcomes Court Ruling on Pentagon’s Anthropic Dispute

Washington –  A federal judge issued a preliminary injunction in response to a motion by Anthropic PBC, which challenged the U.S. Government’s designation of the company as a supply chain ris...
reading-tablet
  • Press Releases
  • Artificial Intelligence
News

CCIA Raises Legal and Implementation Concerns with Maryland AI Chatbot Bill

Washington – The Computer & Communications Industry Association will testify today before the Maryland Senate Finance Committee in opposition to HB 952, legislation that would establish new liab...
reading-tablet
  • Press Releases
  • Artificial Intelligence
News

CCIA Europe Responds to European Parliament’s Rejection of CSAM Scanning Extension

The European Parliament today failed to agree on the extension of temporary rules permitting electronic communications service providers to scan for child sexual abuse material (CSAM) while the long-t...
reading-tablet
  • Statements
    Online Safety
News

CCIA Welcomes Supreme Court Decision Expected to Rein in Dubious Copyright Liability Claims

Washington — The Supreme Court has ruled in a copyright case that will give online businesses more clarity and certainty amid an environment of growing copyright lawsuits. Justices had the opportuni...
reading-tablet
  • Press Releases
  • Copyright