Limitations and loopholes in the EU AI Act and AI Liability Directives: what this means for the European Union, the United States, and beyond
Predictive and generative artificial intelligence (AI) have both become integral parts of our lives through their use in making highly impactful decisions. AI systems are already deployed widely—for example, in employment, healthcare, insurance, finance, education, public administration, and crimina...
Main Author: | Wachter, S |
---|---|
Format: | Journal article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Yale Law School
2024
|
Similar Items
-
Trustworthy artificial intelligence and the European Union AI act: on the conflation of trustworthiness and acceptability of risk
by: Laux, J, et al.
Published: (2023) -
The proposed EU Directives for AI liability leave worrying gaps likely to impact medical AI
by: Mindy Nunez Duffourc, et al.
Published: (2023-04-01) -
AI and Liability in Medicine: The Case of Assistive-Diagnostic AI
by: Rimkutė Deimantė
Published: (2024-02-01) -
Automated vehicle liability and AI
by: Goudkamp, J
Published: (2024) -
Institutionalised distrust and human oversight of artificial intelligence: toward a democratic design of AI governance under the European Union AI Act
by: Laux, JM
Published: (2023)