Regulating Artificial Intelligence: U. S. and International . . . Opponents of broad federal AI regulations assert that industry is taking steps to self-regulate and that additional regulation would stifle innovation at a time when international competition in AI is accelerating, which could lead to negative economic and national security outcomes for the United States Other
AI Threats and International Law - European Institute for . . . In 2021, European Union lawmakers successfully approved the world’s first extensive set of regulations for artificial intelligence, becoming a leading institution on the subject matter According to the digital strategy, the Commission enhanced the EU regulatory framework for AI, called AI Act
AI Regulations around the World - 2025 - Mind Foundry The Biden administration would likely have strongly opposed Executive Order 14179, viewing it as a deregulatory overcorrection that undermines safeguards for AI safety, fairness, and national security
U. S. Joins 17 Other Countries In Agreement To Keep AI Safe Eighteen countries including the U S released an international agreement Sunday focused on keeping artificial intelligence safe during development and deployment, and calling on AI companies
Militarization of AI Has Severe Implications for Global . . . The militarization of AI has profound implications for global security and warfare AI can improve military capabilities by allowing quicker decision-making, more accurate targeting and more efficient resource allocation AI-powered autonomous weapons can operate without human intervention, potentially reducing the danger to human soldiers
The EU AI Act: National Security Implications What is the EU AI Act? The EU AI Act is the first comprehensive, international regulation for AI It aims to protect fundamental rights in the face of risks posed by AI and to ensure AI is developed and used safely It was approved by the Council of the European Union on 21 May 2024 and comes into force on 1 August 2024 [1]