Europe launches AI office to serve as 'global reference point' on safety, policy and development

EU aims to create a forum for coordinating member state safety commissions

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The European Commission this week opened its new artificial intelligence (AI) office, which will help set policy for the bloc while also serving as a "global reference point," according to officials. 

"The European AI Office will support the development and use of trustworthy AI, while protecting against AI risks," the commission wrote in a statement published on its website. "The AI Office was established within the European Commission as the center of AI expertise and forms the foundation for a single European AI governance system."

"The AI Office also promotes an innovative ecosystem of trustworthy AI, to reap the societal and economic benefits," the committee said. "It will ensure a strategic, coherent and effective European approach on AI at the international level, becoming a global reference point."

The Commission presented its package for AI strategy in April 2021, aiming to turn the European Union (EU) into a "world-class hub for AI and ensuring that AI is human-centric and trustworthy." 

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The new office will work mainly to coordinate policy between its member states and support their own governance bodies – a key point of the Bletchley Park agreement signed last year during the world’s first AI safety summit

European Parliament drilling

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen speaks during a debate on the conclusions of the Dec. 14-15, 2023 European Council and preparations for the extraordinary European Council scheduled for Feb. 1, 2024, at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, France, on Jan. 17, 2024. (Frederick Florin/AFP via Getty Images)

The Bletchley Declaration, signed by 28 countries including the United States, China and the United Kingdom, focuses on two main points: Identifying AI safety risks and "building respective risk-based policies across our countries to ensure safety in light of such risks."

Safety in the development and use of AI has remained a central issue for debate and policy since the public first latched onto the potential of the technology to transform 

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To get a handle on controlling that development led the European Commission to launch an AI innovation package, including the GenAI4EU initiative, which will support startups and small and midsize enterprises to ensure any new AI project "respects EU values and rules."

French finance minister with British PM

Bruno Le Maire, France's finance minister, left, and Rishi Sunak, U.K. prime minister, on day two of the AI Safety Summit 2023 at Bletchley Park in Bletchley, U.K., on Thursday, Nov. 2, 2023. The two-day summit was prompted by U.K. concerns about powerful artificial intelligence models expected to be released next year, which will have capabilities the government fears not even developers understand. (Chris J. Ratcliffe/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen in a State of the Union address announced a new initiative to make Europe’s supercomputers available to innovative European AI startups and launched a competition to provide €250,000 (roughly $273,500) prize money to companies who develop new AI models under an open-source license for non-commercial use or must publish research findings. 

Competing to lead the way in AI does not just mean staying at the cutting edge of tech development. AI safety policy has proven a competitive area for nations jockeying to establish themselves at the lead of the industry.

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The U.S. established the U.S. Artificial Intelligence Safety Institute under the National Institute of Standards of Technology following the safety summit, looking to "facilitate the development of standards for safety, security, and testing of AI models," among other tasks.

Ursula von der Leyen speaks

Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, looks up during a press conference after a board meeting of the Christian Democratic Union in Berlin on Monday, Feb. 19, 2024. Von der Leyen announced her intention to run for a second term as EU commission president. (Sean Gallup/Getty Images)

Europe has followed suit and released the EU AI Act, which the commission touts as the world’s first comprehensive law on AI. The European Parliament declared that AI developed within member states should remain "safe, transparent, traceable, non-discriminatory and environmentally friendly." 

"AI systems should be overseen by people, rather than by automation, to prevent harmful outcomes," the Parliament said.

The AI Office will work with a "range of institutions, experts and stakeholders" to accomplish its tasks, including an independent panel of scientific experts to ensure "strong links to the scientific community." 

Peter Aitken is a Fox News Digital reporter with a focus on national and global news. 

Authored by Peter Aitken via FoxNews March 7th 2024