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UK House of Lords warns against complacency towards AI

The House of Lords, the UK’s upper legislative chamber, has published a further report on Artificial Intelligence, focussing on ethical AI, safeguards over the use of data, support for jobs and new skills, central training for sector-specific regulators, a champion for AI in public service and immigration rules to attract AI specialists to the UK.

The report, AI in the UK: No Room for Complacency, puts strong emphasis on enabling public understanding of the use of data and safeguards such as “data trusts”. It recognises “ethical AI” as the only “sustainable way forward” and calls on the UK’s Centre for Data Ethics and Innovation to develop two ethical frameworks: “one for the ethical development of AI, including issues of prejudice and bias, and the other for the ethical use of AI by policymakers and businesses”. It recommends support for jobs and retraining focussed on industries most at risk. It calls on the UK’s Information Commissioner’s Office to coordinate the development of training for sector regulators to enable them to “identify gaps in regulation, and to learn about AI and apply it to their sectors”. It calls for a Cabinet Committee within Government to develop a five-year plan for AI and the appointment of a Chief Data Officer to promote the use and understanding of AI in the public service. It calls for changes to immigration rules to promote the study, research and development of AI in the UK.

The full recommendations are set out below with some explanations and useful links added.

Public understanding and data

Ethics

Jobs

National Retraining Scheme

Public Trust and regulation

Government coordination

A Chief Data Officer

Autonomy Development Centre

The United Kingdom as a world leader

Matt Hervey is Head of Artificial Intelligence (UK) at Gowling WLG (UK) and advises on Artificial Intelligence (AI) and IP across all sectors, including automotive, life sciences, finance and retail. Find out more about Matt Hervey on the Gowling WLG website. He is co-editor of The Law of Artificial Intelligence (Sweet & Maxwell).

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