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Summary
Individuals and companies that suffer harm from drones, robots and other products or services equipped with artificial intelligence software will find it easier to sue for compensation under EU draft rules. The AI Liability Directive aims to address the increasing proliferation of AI-enabled products and services and the patchwork of national rules across the 27-country European Union. Victims can sue for compensation for harm to their life, property, health and privacy due to the fault or omission of a provider, developer or user of AI technology or was discriminated in a recruitment process using AI, the draft rules said. Users with unsafe non-EU products will be able to sue the manufacturer’s EU representative for compensation. The AI Liability Directive will need the green light from EU countries and EU lawmakers before it can become law.
Show Notes
Individuals and companies that suffer harm from drones, robots and other products or services equipped with artificial intelligence software will find it easier to sue for compensation under EU draft rules. The AI Liability Directive aims to address the increasing proliferation of AI-enabled products and services and the patchwork of national rules across the 27-country European Union. Victims can sue for compensation for harm to their life, property, health and privacy due to the fault or omission of a provider, developer or user of AI technology or was discriminated in a recruitment process using AI, the draft rules said. Users with unsafe non-EU products will be able to sue the manufacturer’s EU representative for compensation. The AI Liability Directive will need the green light from EU countries and EU lawmakers before it can become law.