“What needs to be observed is the fact that the open letter is not meant to challenge the newly enacted EU AI Act,” said Nils Rauer, expert in the intersection between AI and the law at Pinsent Masons. “The focus of concern lies on the data. Every AI-based application needs adequate access to data. This begins with the training of the model and continues throughout the entire lifecycle of the product. AI without constant feedback is useless.”
“Creating a reliable regulatory framework for the development and deploying of AI is highly welcome across all business sectors,” added Cerys Wyn Davies, who also specialises in AI-related law at Pinsent Masons. “Businesses need legal certainty and security. Those are the preconditions for investing in the development of modern technologies.”
In their letter, the signatories said the effective operation of the EU single market and a “shared regulatory rulebook” can enable EU “to compete with the rest of the world on AI and reap the benefits of open source models”. However, they raised concerns about the absence of such building blocks for investment.
“If companies and institutions are going to invest tens of billions of euros to build generative AI for European citizens, they require clear rules, consistently applied, enabling the use of European data,” the signatories said. “But in recent times, regulatory decision making has become fragmented and unpredictable, while interventions by the European data protection authorities have created huge uncertainty about what kinds of data can be used to train AI models. This means the next generation of open source AI models, and products, services we build on them, won’t understand or reflect European knowledge, culture or languages.”
“Europe faces a choice that will impact the region for decades. It can choose to reassert the principle of harmonisation enshrined in regulatory frameworks like the GDPR so that AI innovation happens here at the same scale and speed as elsewhere. Or, it can continue to reject progress, betray the ambitions of the single market and watch as the rest of the world builds on technologies that Europeans will not have access to. We hope European policymakers and regulators see what is at stake if there is no change of course,” they said.