Before establishing laws to control the technology, Google-owned ”Alphabet” and the European Commission hope to strike an agreement on artificial intelligence including European and international enterprises.
Thierry Breton, EU Commissioner for Industry, met with Sundar Pichai, CEO of Google and its parent firm “Alphabet” in Brussels.
Breton explained that he and his visitor had decided that they couldn’t wait till the AI rules become applied.
“We must manage the emergency situation while not stifling innovation.” As a result, we must identify the necessary instruments and be firm about some parts that will be overseen, as well as foresee the consequences of the Artificial Intelligence Act to some extent,” says Thierry Breton, EU Commissioner for Industry.
The agreement, the specifics of which are still unknown, will encompass all significant businesses working in the field of artificial intelligence both inside and outside of Europe.
Although artificial intelligence has long been on the agenda in Brussels, the market expansion of “Chat GPT” has sparked discussion and put the underlying concepts under the EU inspection.
Basic models are ones that use a vast quantity of data, such as text, graphics, music, voice, and code, to complete a set of tasks rather than having a fixed but unchangeable function.
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