Siri, self-driving cars, or film suggestions on Netflix: artificial intelligence (AI) is everywhere. Computers are used ever more often in the process of intelligence-driven decision-making or the autonomous performance of tasks. By deploying AI, mundane tasks can be made more efficient.
The use of artificial intelligence is also on the rise in the business community. We let ChatGPT write social media posts, platforms use AI systems to remove unwanted posts automatically, and the Tax Administration uses AI for a risk classification model.
The rapid emergence and development of AI is not yet sufficiently reflected in current laws and regulations. Proposals for new regulations are on the table, such as the EU Artificial Intelligence Act, and more frameworks are likely to follow soon.
Astrid Sixma describes how AI is currently regulated and where additional regulation is in order, from the perspective of several legal areas.She answers questions like: can we use AI for pricing our products? Can we use data obtained from customers to train our AI system? Is an AI-created product eligible or not for protection by the Dutch Copyright Act, and when?
This article is a chapter from the book Law Over Borders Comparative Guide 2022: Artificial Intelligence of The Global Legal Post.
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