The European Commission has withdrawn its proposed AI Liability Directive, which aimed to hold AI developers accountable for damages caused by their systems. This decision came after criticism regarding excessive regulation and content moderation at the AI Action Summit in Paris. The Commission indicated that no foreseeable agreement exists on the law, prompting a reevaluation of its approach to AI regulation.
U.S. Vice-President JD Vance's strong opposition to stringent regulations influenced this withdrawal, as he argued that excessive regulation could stifle innovation in the AI sector. The move is seen as a strategic effort to position Europe as an attractive hub for AI investment while balancing the need for public trust in technology. The withdrawal reflects a pragmatic response to the changing landscape of AI governance, especially following the adoption of the EU's AI Act.
• EU withdraws AI Liability Directive due to regulatory concerns.
• U.S. opposition influences EU's approach to AI regulation.
The AI Liability Directive was intended to hold AI developers accountable for damages caused by their systems.
Generative AI refers to AI systems that can create content, which faced regulatory scrutiny.
The EU's AI Act is the world's first comprehensive regulatory framework for artificial intelligence.
Isomorphic Labs, the AI drug discovery platform that was spun out of Google's DeepMind in 2021, has raised external capital for the first time. The $600
How to level up your teaching with AI. Discover how to use clones and GPTs in your classroom—personalized AI teaching is the future.
Trump's Third Term? AI already knows how this can be done. A study shows how OpenAI, Grok, DeepSeek & Google outline ways to dismantle U.S. democracy.
Sam Altman today revealed that OpenAI will release an open weight artificial intelligence model in the coming months. "We are excited to release a powerful new open-weight language model with reasoning in the coming months," Altman wrote on X.