February 14, 2023 | Maria Fritzsche
Estimated reading time: 4 minutes
AI solutions – a strong ally under global review
The term Artificial Intelligence (AI) is floating around all over the news and the internet, especially as OpenAI’s ChatGPT, a chatbot-style technology, becomes the poster child of generative AI.
“As showcased by ChatGPT, AI solutions can offer great opportunities for businesses and citizens but can also pose risks. This is why we need a solid regulatory framework to ensure trustworthy AI based on high-quality data,” said Thierry Breton, the European Commissioner for the Internal Market.
With AI rapidly developing, the European Commission proposed the first-ever legal framework on AI.
EU lawmakers are scheduled to vote on the draft AI Act in March. This could mean the final Act should be adopted as early as the end of this year. At the moment, lawmakers continue to work on fundamental aspects of the legislation, including an AI definition, scope, prohibited practices and high-risk categories.
AI Act European Union
The UK’s regulatory body, Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), is optimistic about the use of AI in financial services according to Chief Data, Information and Intelligence Officer Jessica Rusu.
“AI has the potential to enable firms to offer better products and services to consumers, improve operational efficiency, increase revenue, and drive innovation.”
Organizations using manual processes to manage their compliance requirements risk non-compliance due to human error and inefficient resource allocations. A recent survey conducted by the FCA with the Bank of England found that UK financial services firms agree with the benefits of AI. 72% of firms that responded are using or developing machine learning (ML) according to the survey. In comparison, in 2020 it was reported that 64% of European banks adopted AI technologies. Now, over 90% of EU banks are said to be using, developing or testing AI technology.
The survey also found that out of the firms who responded almost half said that there are Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) and FCA regulations that limit ML implementation and one-quarter of firms named “a lack of clarity within existing regulations” as the reason for this.
The FCA closed its call for feedback on how artificial intelligence may affect the objectives of the FCA, Bank of England and PRA earlier this month. It will be interesting to see the outcome of this consultation.
US National AI Initiative Act
The National AI Initiative Act of 2020 was passed in January 2021 with an overall focus on fostering innovation to maintain the US’s top spot as a global leader in AI. The introduction of the Act was met with greater resistance than the EU AI Act concerning legal restrictions. Another notable difference concerns governance. The National AI Initiative Act of 2020 introduced limited governance whereas the EU is looking at very specific governance requirements.
The US and the EU come from different perspectives when regulating AI. The US from a view to preserving their place in a competitive market and the EU from a perspective of protecting fundamental rights, however, neither is guaranteed a successful outcome nor has the golden ticket to achieve what they set out to do.
CUBE comment
The implementation of the AI Act is likely to shake up many sectors and industries. The financial sector is certainly going to be impacted by these changes and further guidance on how this new legislation will show how it interacts with existing data-focused legislation. For now, the EU is facing major challenges, including pressures from US firms. Facebook stated in their consultation response regarding the AI Act that many requirements are not achievable. The AI Act is proposed to have a wide territorial reach and therefore it can apply to AI systems supplied by non-EU organizations. Therefore, another element to this will be based on the UK’s plans to regulate AI and how the FCA looks to adopt the AI regulation in the UK going forward.
“There are days when I’m optimistic and moments when I’m pessimistic about how humanity will put AI to use,” said Breton.
At CUBE, we remain optimistic about the use of AI and specifically how it can transform the way in which regulatory change management activities are performed. AI is a crucial part of our existing products and will have an ever-increasing impact on our future roadmap. We believe in both transparent and ethical technology, find out more about how we approach the use of AI.
Keep ahead of emerging AI regulations by speaking to CUBE.