Microsoft Xiaoice is one of the most advanced examples of artificial intelligence, but AI systems that are becoming "almost human" lead to major privacy issues that led the Council of Europe to issue guidelines on the topic.
LawBytes #35 deals this week with the new GDPR adoption statistics published by the EU Commission and the New Guidelines on Artificial Intelligence (AI) from the Council of Europe.
LawBytes #31 deals this week with WIPOโs first "Technology Trends" Study on developments in Artificial Intelligence inventions and the EDPB opinion on processing of personal data on clinical trials recently issued.
AI and the magic formula on how to regulate it are continuously invoked, but can traditional regulations set rules for artificial intelligence? What's missing?