Europe is at risk of falling behind the U.S. and China on artificial intelligence as it focuses on regulating the technology, according to Prince Constantijn of the Netherlands.
TakeAway Points:
- According to Prince Constantijn of the Netherlands, Europe runs the risk of becoming only a regulatory body rather than a leader in artificial intelligence.
- According to him, the continent performs “extremely poorly” in terms of financial availability for capital-intensive tech enterprises and regulatory market unification.
- With legislation demanding rigorous assessment for so-called “general-purpose” models like OpenAI’s GPT-4, EU regulators are adopting a severe stance towards AI.
“Our ambition seems to be limited to being good regulators,” Constantijn said in an interview on the sidelines of the Money 20/20 fintech conference in Amsterdam earlier this month.
Prince Constantijn is the third and youngest son of former Dutch Queen Beatrix and the younger brother of reigning Dutch King Willem-Alexander.
He is the special envoy of the Dutch startup accelerator Techleap, where he works to help local startups grow fast internationally by improving their access to capital, markets, talent, and technologies.
“We’ve seen this in the data space [with GDPR], we’ve seen this now in the platform space, and now in the AI space,” Constantijn added.
Europe Restrictions on AI
European Union regulators have taken a tough approach to artificial intelligence, with formal regulations limiting how developers and companies can apply the technology in certain scenarios.
The bloc gave final approval to the EU AI Act, a ground-breaking AI law, last month. Officials are concerned by how quickly the technology is advancing and the risks it poses around job displacement, privacy, and algorithmic bias.
The law takes a risk-based approach to artificial intelligence, meaning that different applications of the technology are treated differently depending on their level of risk.
For generative AI applications, the EU AI Act sets out clear transparency requirements and copyright rules.
All generative AI systems would have to make it possible to prevent illegal output, to disclose if content is produced by AI and to publish summaries of the copyrighted data used for training purposes.
But the EU’s AI Act requires even stricter scrutiny for high-impact, general-purpose AI models that could pose “systemic risk,” such as OpenAI’s GPT-4, including thorough evaluations and compulsory reporting of any “serious incidents.”
Prince Constantijn said he’s “really concerned” that Europe’s focus has been more on regulating AI than trying to become a leader in innovation in space.
“It’s good to have guardrails. We want to bring clarity to the market, predictability, and all that,” he said earlier this month on the sidelines of Money 20/20. “But it’s very hard to do that in such a fast-moving space.”
“There are big risks in getting it wrong, and like we’ve seen in genetically modified organisms, it hasn’t stopped the development. It just stopped Europe developing it, and now we are consumers of the product, rather than producers able to influence the market as it develops.”
Europe’s Strict Regulations
Between 1994 and 2004, the EU imposed an effective moratorium on new approvals of genetically modified crops over perceived health risks associated with them.
The bloc subsequently developed strict rules for GMOs, citing a need to protect citizens’ health and the environment. The U.S. National Academy of Sciences says that genetically modified crops are safe for both human consumption and the environment.
Constantijn added that Europe is making it “quite hard” for itself to innovate in AI due to “big restrictions on data,” particularly when it comes to sectors like health and medical science.
In addition, the U.S. market is “a much bigger and unified market” with more free-flowing capital, Constantijn said. On these points, he added, “Europe scores quite poorly.”
“Where we score well is, I think, on talent. We score well on technology itself.” he said.
Plus, when it comes to developing applications that use AI, “Europe is definitely going to be competitive,” Constantijn noted. He nevertheless added that “the underlying data infrastructure and IT infrastructure is something we’ll keep depending on large platforms to provide.”