The code creates legal uncertainty and beyond the law regarding artificial intelligence, says a company representative.
Less than a month before entering the force of the European Union’s new policies for the developers of general artificial intelligence models, Meta refused to sign a spontaneous skill -created skill to help adherence to these standards, Techcrunch reports.
“Europe is mistaken for artificial intelligence,” said Joel Kaplan, director of Meta on global issues in the LinkedIn post. “We carefully reviewed the Code of Practice of the European Commission on Modelling Modeling General Purpose (GPAi) and Meta would not sign it. This code creates a lot of legal uncertainty for those who develop models, and also provides steps that are more than the law in artificial intelligence.”
The Code of Practice, published by the European Commission this month, is designed to help companies enforce the necessary processes to comply with the law. In particular, it provides for a regular update documentation on AI services, pirate content use is prohibited to teach models and obliged to comply with the requirements of copyright holders to use their data.
Kaplan considers the EU’s approach so much and thus it can slow down the development of advanced AI models in Europe and business business in Europe, which aims to create products based on these technologies.
The leading companies of the technological world – including Alphabet, Microsoft, Mistral AI and Meta itself – repeatedly calling on the European Commission to postpone the implementation of regulations, but the EU does not plan to change the schedule.
We remind you, earlier it was reported that the meta was investing the road -a billion -billion to create a superinelleck.
Meta hired one of Apple’s keys and specialists – media
News from CORRESPONDENT.NET On the telegram and whatsapp. Subscribe to our channels https://t.me/KorresPondentNet and WhatsApp
Source: korrespondent

I am Ben Stock, a passionate and experienced digital journalist working in the news industry. At the Buna Times, I write articles covering technology developments and related topics. I strive to provide reliable information that my readers can trust. My research skills are top-notch, as well as my ability to craft engaging stories on timely topics with clarity and accuracy.