Building trust in human-centric artificial intelligence
Overview
Artificial intelligence (AI) has the potential to transform our world for the better: it can improve healthcare, reduce energy consumption, make cars safer, and enable farmers to use water and natural resources more efficiently. AI can be used to predict environmental and climate change, improve financial risk management and provides the tools to manufacture, with less waste, products tailored to our needs. AI can also help to detect fraud and cybersecurity threats, and enables law enforcement agencies to fight crime more efficiently.
AI can benefit the whole of society and the economy. It is a strategic technology that is now being developed and used at a rapid pace across the world. Nevertheless, AI also brings with it new challenges for the future of work, and raises legal and ethical questions.
To address these challenges and make the most of the opportunities which AI offers, the Commission published a European strategy 1 in April 2018. The strategy places people at the centre of the development of AI ā human-centric AI. It is a three-pronged approach to boost the EUās technological and industrial capacity and AI uptake across the economy, prepare for socio-economic changes, and ensure an appropriate ethical and legal framework.
To deliver on the AI strategy, the Commission developed together with Member States a coordinated plan on AI 2 , which it presented in December 2018, to create synergies, pool data ā the raw material for many AI applications ā and increase joint investments. The aim is to foster cross-border cooperation and mobilise all players to increase public and private investments to at least EUR 20 billion annually over the next decade 3 . The Commission doubled its investments in AI in Horizon 2020 and plans to invest EUR 1 billion annually from Horizon Europe and the Digital Europe Programme, in support notably of common data spaces in health, transport and manufacturing, and large experimentation facilities such as smart hospitals and infrastructures for automated vehicles and a strategic research agenda.
To implement such a common strategic research, innovation and deployment agenda the Commission has intensified its dialogue with all relevant stakeholders from industry, research institutes and public authorities. The new Digital Europe programme will also be crucial in helping to make AI available to small and medium-size enterprises across all Member States through digital innovation hubs, strengthened testing and experimentation facilities, data spaces and training programmes.
Building on its reputation for safe and high-quality products, Europeās ethical approach to AI strengthens citizensā trust in the digital development and aims at building a competitive advantage for European AI companies. The purpose of this Communication is to launch a comprehensive piloting phase involving stakeholders on the widest scale in order to test the practical implementation of ethical guidance for AI development and use.
This content is available under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International licence.
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Key Information
Jurisdiction: Europe - EU
Date published: 8 Apr 2019
License: Ā Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International licence