Tuesday, July 11, 2023

Costa Rica uses ChatGPT's assistance to create an AI regulation bill

 


Costa Rican lawmakers asked ChatGPT to write a new law on their behalf to emphasize the need to regulate artificial intelligence. The individuals from Congress told the chatbot to "have a similar outlook as a legal counselor" and draft a bill as indicated by the constitution. They then, at that point, sent the subsequent message word for word to the lawmaking body. " We have had numerous positive responses and many individuals who believed it to be extremely unsafe," Senator Vanessa Castro, who drove the presentation of the bill, said.

ChatGPT suggested that Costa Rica establish a body to regulate AI systems based on accountability, explainability, bias prevention, and human rights protection. The bill was introduced in May, but before it is sent to the parliamentary commission for amendments and further debate in Congress, it is currently being discussed in public forums. Castro stated, "We discovered that artificial intelligence is just another legislative tool that requires human intervention."

Johana Obando, a congresswoman, stated that she supported AI regulation but opposed the bill because ChatGPT merely fabricated statistics and Costa Rican constitution articles. In any case, her fundamental protest was that she said the bill was a simple "rundown of good wishes" absent a lot of nibble. ChatGPT said "we ought to control in view of basic freedoms and global shows," Obando said. " But what exactly are those conventions and rights? The bill doesn't make reference to them. "

In the past year, Costa Rica became the eighth nation in Latin America to either discuss or approve a law regulating AI. Legislators in Latin America are pushing for legislation inspired by the AI Act of the European Union, which stipulates that the use of the technology in biometric surveillance is prohibited and that AI-generated content must be clearly identified. In Mexico, a bill presented in Spring supports the production of a moral structure for the improvement of computer based intelligence, in view of the security of common liberties and individual information. The first law in the region to regulate AI was approved in June by Peru. Before it can take effect, the law needs the president's signature. Based on digital security and ethics principles, the law creates a national authority to oversee AI development. Over the course of the past four years, Brazil's Congress has been considering three AI regulation bills. One artificial intelligence legitimate system, supported by the Place of Agents in 2021, however impeded by the Senate. The region's lawmakers agree that new regulations should focus on combating bias and discrimination in AI systems; however, a lot of the proposed legislation is vague about how to prevent, investigate, and punish it.

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