Skip to content

Digital summit: government wants "sensible" AI regulation

The German government's Digital Summit provides an opportunity to take stock of digitalization in Germany and realign goals. The focus here is on the topic of artificial intelligence.

Robert Habeck, Vice-Chancellor and Federal Minister for Economic Affairs and Climate Protection,....aussiedlerbote.de
Robert Habeck, Vice-Chancellor and Federal Minister for Economic Affairs and Climate Protection, speaks at an appointment..aussiedlerbote.de

Digital summit: government wants "sensible" AI regulation

The German government wants to prevent overly strict regulation of artificial intelligence in the European Union. "The most important thing now is to get a sensible AI regulation at European level," said Federal Economics Minister Robert Habeck (Greens) at the start of the German government's digital summit in Jena in a podcast by digital association Bitkom. "You can do a lot of things right, but you can also do a lot of things wrong," said the Vice Chancellor.

On Monday, a position paper by the German government, together with the governments of Italy and France, on AI regulation, which is addressed to the Spanish EU Council Presidency, also became public. The paper generally supports the need for AI regulation. However, the AI law should only regulate the use of AI and not the technology as such. "This risk-based approach is necessary and serves to preserve innovation and safety at the same time." On July 1, Spain took over the Presidency of the Council of the European Union for the second half of 2023.

Habeck said: "If you overregulate this, we will have the best traffic regulations, but no traffic on the road. That must not happen." In addition to appropriate AI regulation, the German government is committed to enabling private sector investment in digital technologies. Germany must "trigger a real wave" in the venture capital sector so that companies can either find their own investors or investors can find suitable companies.

Habeck admitted that there are still deficits in the digitalization of administration in Germany. The minister identified "the internal inertia of an established system that needs to be overcome" as the cause. "Someone just believes that the state still needs the paper form for some applications or to be able to document this." However, the parties in the traffic light coalition agree on overcoming these deficits.

Around 1,000 participants from politics, business, science and civil society are discussing the implementation of the digital transformation at the German government's Digital Summit. Among other things, they will discuss whether and how artificial intelligence can make administration more efficient and citizen-friendly.

  1. The Federal Government has expressed its support for a balanced approach in regulating artificial intelligence, advocating for sensible regulations that promote innovation and safety, while avoiding overregulation, which could hinder the use of AI in telecommunications and information technology.
  2. As part of its economic policy, the German government is investing in digitization and encouraging private sector investment in digital technologies, aiming to stimulate venture capital and foster a thriving digital economy.
  3. The role of the Federal Government in fostering digitization extends to addressing the deficits in digitalizing administration, especially overcoming the internal inertia of established systems that rely on paper forms, as recognized by Federal Economics Minister Robert Habeck.

Source: www.dpa.com

Comments

Latest

The tally of victims has climbed up to 10.

The tally of victims has climbed up to 10.

The tally of victims has climbed up to 10. Following a Russian assault on a healthcare facility in the Ukrainian border town of Sumy, the casualty count has risen to ten. Initial reports indicated that a single fatality occurred during the initial strike on the clinic, as per Ukrainian Interior

Members Public