CYAIMar 29, 2023

Quantitative study about the estimated impact of the AI Act

arXiv:2304.06503v11 citationsh-index: 7
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This provides a preliminary assessment for policymakers and stakeholders concerned about over- or under-regulation in the EU AI landscape, though it is incremental as it builds on existing regulatory analysis.

The paper tackles the problem of assessing the impact of the EU's AI Act by applying a systematic classification approach to AI systems in Germany, finding that only about 30% would be regulated as high-risk while the rest are low-risk, but notes the database is not representative.

With the Proposal for a Regulation laying down harmonised rules on Artificial Intelligence (AI Act) the European Union provides the first regulatory document that applies to the entire complex of AI systems. While some fear that the regulation leaves too much room for interpretation and thus bring little benefit to society, others expect that the regulation is too restrictive and, thus, blocks progress and innovation, as well as hinders the economic success of companies within the EU. Without a systematic approach, it is difficult to assess how it will actually impact the AI landscape. In this paper, we suggest a systematic approach that we applied on the initial draft of the AI Act that has been released in April 2021. We went through several iterations of compiling the list of AI products and projects in and from Germany, which the Lernende Systeme platform lists, and then classified them according to the AI Act together with experts from the fields of computer science and law. Our study shows a need for more concrete formulation, since for some provisions it is often unclear whether they are applicable in a specific case or not. Apart from that, it turns out that only about 30\% of the AI systems considered would be regulated by the AI Act, the rest would be classified as low-risk. However, as the database is not representative, the results only provide a first assessment. The process presented can be applied to any collections, and also repeated when regulations are about to change. This allows fears of over- or under-regulation to be investigated before the regulations comes into effect.

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