Saturday, July 4, 2026

EU recommends strict law to regulate high-risk AI systems

High-risk systems will need certification from approved bodies before they can be put on the EU market.

• May 21, 2024
European Union
European Union

European Union ministers have unanimously approved the Artificial Intelligence Act; a law that regulates the use of transformative technology in “high-risk” situations, such as law enforcement and employment.

The European Union hopes that by laying down strict AI rules relatively early in the technology’s development, it will address the dangers in time and help shape the international agenda for regulating AI.

Systems intended for use in “high-risk” situations, which are listed in the law’s annexes, will have to meet various standards spanning transparency, accuracy, cybersecurity and quality of training data, among other things.

Some uses – such as Chinese-style social credit scoring – will be banned outright.

High-risk systems will have to obtain certification from approved bodies before they can be put on the EU market.

A new “AI Office” will oversee enforcement at EU level.

There are also more basic rules for “general purpose” systems that may be used in various situations – some high-risk, others not.

For example, providers of such systems will have to keep certain technical documents for audit.

However, providers of especially powerful general-purpose AI systems will have to notify the European Commission if the system possesses certain technical capabilities.

Unless the provider can prove that their system poses no serious risk, the commission could designate it as a “general-purpose AI model with systemic risk,” after which stricter risk-mitigation rules would apply.

Meanwhile, AI-generated content such as images, sound or text would have to be marked as such to protect against misleading deepfakes.

The European Commission proposed the first draft of the AI Act in April 2021, having published a “white paper” outlining its plan for a risk-based approach in February 2020.

The European Parliament pushed for much stricter rules such as a blanket ban on police use of real-time facial recognition in live CCTV feeds.

In the face of this, EU member states were reluctant to impose too many restrictions on law enforcement and border security.

They feared too much red tape would harm economic competitiveness.

Negotiators for the parliament and the member state finally reached a compromise in December, after several rounds of gruelling late-night talks.

The final law does impose a general ban on real-time facial recognition in CCTV, but there are exceptions for law enforcement uses.

Such as finding missing persons or victims of kidnapping, preventing human trafficking, or finding suspects in serious criminal cases.

Now that the law has been finalised by today’s unanimous vote among ministers, it must be signed by the presidents of the EU legislature and then published in the EU’s statute book.

It then technically becomes law 20 days later, but most of its provisions won’t take effect until two years after that.

(dpa/NAN)

We have recently deactivated our website's comment provider in favour of other channels of distribution and commentary. We encourage you to join the conversation on our stories via our Facebook, Twitter and other social media pages.

More from Peoples Gazette

farmers

Agriculture

FG tasks ECOWAS on leveraging financing strategies for agroecology

The federal government has urged stakeholders in the agriculture and finance sectors in the West Africa region to leverage financing strategies to enhance agroecology practices

Katsina State

Politics

Katsina youths pledge to deliver over 2 million votes to Atiku

“Katsina State is Atiku’s political base because it is his second home.”

Argentina and Cape Verde match

World

Argentina edge Cape Verde to advance to World Cup round of 16

Messi and Julian Alvarez produced a perfect link-up play after the goal fell short to Cape Verde’s strong defence.

Evacuated Nigerians from South Africa

Diaspora

No compensation for Nigerians leaving property behind; they should rather show us their drug dens to clean them up: South Africa 

She added, “Informal squatter camps and settlements are never properties because they are illegal in the country.”

People cooling off in France

World

France’s heatwave death toll climbs to over 2,000

The situation has placed heavy pressure on health and emergency services.

Colombia-Ghana match

Sport

Colombia beat Ghana 1-0 to reach World Cup round of 16

The match was played at the Kansas City Stadium, U.S.

Trading at the stock market

Hot news Home top

Stock market rebounds with N3.16 trillion gain

Zenith Bank led the activity chart by volume with 49.78 million shares traded, representing 10.94 per cent of the total volume.

Nicholas Mutu (Credit: Nicholas Mutu)

Heading 5

Court orders reps member Nicholas Mutu to forfeit N150 million NDDC bribe to FG

The fund was said to have been received from a NDDC consultant (Starline Consultancy Services),