KEY POINTS
  • A committee of lawmakers in the European Parliament on Thursday approved the EU’s AI Act, making it closer to becoming law.
  • The regulation takes a risk-based approach to regulating artificial intelligence.
  • The AI Act specifies requirements for developers of "foundation models" such as ChatGPT, including provisions to ensure that their training data doesn't violate copyright law.
Privately held companies have been left to develop AI technology at breakneck speed, giving rise to systems like Microsoft-backed OpenAI's ChatGPT and Google's Bard.

A key committee of lawmakers in the European Parliament have approved a first-of-its-kind artificial intelligence regulation — making it closer to becoming law.

The approval marks a landmark development in the race among authorities to get a handle on AI, which is evolving with breakneck speed. The law, known as the European AI Act, is the first law for AI systems in the West. China has already developed draft rules designed to manage how companies develop generative AI products like ChatGPT.