I think I have watched nearly every EU AI Act breakdown video on youtube. This is the one folks. So easy to digest. Really helping me write my documentation right now and would appreciate if we could get the slide deck for this if available? Also some point on how you would like to be appropriately referenced.
Really excellent talk with interesting points and views (also from the people asking questions). Regarding the question around the 40 minute mark on compliance being "killing" for small business and startups, I think the logic why there are no exemptions is very easy. As the talk started out with, the AIA is in principle a product safety regulation. The potential harm of the product has 0 correlation with the size of the company building it. Safety regulations are there to prevent the end-user from (significant) harm. There is no reason to exempt smaller companies from going through the same kind of safety requirements as big tech. To make the analogy to weapon systems: just because my company is 15 people working in a "shed" doesn't mean my products produced are anything less lethal and dangerous than what a Lockheed Martin would produce. In my opinion this is a strength of the AIA: it isn't principally trading safety principles for economic interest.
Other countries are developing AI Models while Europeans are developing AI regulrations? Are you serious? What search engines and wordprocessor Apps do Europeans have right now?
any Ai innovation will be bought up by american tech monopolies, microsoft already bought up a quarter of french ai company mistral already the us refuses to regulate its monopolies so someone has to do it for them
I think I have watched nearly every EU AI Act breakdown video on youtube. This is the one folks. So easy to digest. Really helping me write my documentation right now and would appreciate if we could get the slide deck for this if available? Also some point on how you would like to be appropriately referenced.
Really excellent talk with interesting points and views (also from the people asking questions). Regarding the question around the 40 minute mark on compliance being "killing" for small business and startups, I think the logic why there are no exemptions is very easy. As the talk started out with, the AIA is in principle a product safety regulation. The potential harm of the product has 0 correlation with the size of the company building it. Safety regulations are there to prevent the end-user from (significant) harm. There is no reason to exempt smaller companies from going through the same kind of safety requirements as big tech. To make the analogy to weapon systems: just because my company is 15 people working in a "shed" doesn't mean my products produced are anything less lethal and dangerous than what a Lockheed Martin would produce.
In my opinion this is a strength of the AIA: it isn't principally trading safety principles for economic interest.
Great Talk!!
great talk. Are the slides available to refer to?
Other countries are developing AI Models while Europeans are developing AI regulrations?
Are you serious? What search engines and wordprocessor Apps do Europeans have right now?
This will kill all AI innovation in Europe
any Ai innovation will be bought up by american tech monopolies, microsoft already bought up a quarter of french ai company mistral already the us refuses to regulate its monopolies so someone has to do it for them