12
Accepted
Identify areas for closer regulatory co-operation on AI and propose co-ordination mechanisms.
Recommendation
The regulatory gap analysis being undertaken by the Government should identify, in consultation with the relevant regulators and co-ordinating entities such as the Digital Regulation Cooperation Forum and the AI and Digital Regulations Service, areas where new AI models and tools will necessitate closer regulatory co-operation, given the extent to which some uses for AI, and some of the challenges these can present— such as accelerating existing biases—are covered by more than one regulator. The gap analysis should also put forward suggestions for delivering this co-ordination, including joint investigations, a streamlined process for regulatory referrals, and enhanced levels of information sharing.
Government Response Summary
The government will establish the Regulatory Innovation Office (RIO) to support regulators in working together smoothly and informing the government of regulatory barriers. It also commits £10m to boost regulators' AI capabilities and £2m to the DRCF's AI and Digital Hub, which supports coordination.
Paragraph Reference
46
Government Response
Accepted
Government Response
Accepted
HM Government
Accepted
The Government recognises that, beyond placing requirements on the development of the most powerful artificial intelligence models, there are a broad range of issues associated with AI development and deployment which require regulatory oversight. In most cases, we believe that our existing expert regulators are best placed to apply rules to the use of AI in the contexts they know better than anyone else. The Government remains committed to a pro-innovation approach, with existing expert regulators addressing AI risks in their sectors, understanding where and how the product or service may be used. AI in their sectors. DSIT remains committed to providing £10m of funding to boost regulators’ AI capabilities. This funding is one part of a broader programme of work to support regulators to adapt to the age of AI. The Government supports coordination, collaboration and knowledge exchange between regulators. For example, Government has provided £2m to support the DRCF’s AI and Digital Hub, a cross-regulatory advice service which enables innovators to get joined-up advice on regulatory compliance. The Government will continue to work with regulators to implement pro- innovation regulatory initiatives, including through our newly established Regulatory Innovation Office (RIO). The Regulatory Innovation Office was formally established on 8th October 2024. It will be the Government’s primary lever for achieving its transformative ambitions in regulatory innovation. The RIO will support regulators to update regulation, speeding up approvals, and ensuring different regulatory bodies work together smoothly. It will work to continuously inform the Government of regulatory barriers to innovation, set priorities for regulators which align with the Government’s broader ambitions and support regulators to develop the capability they need to meet them and grow the economy. The RIO will initially support the growth of four fast-growing areas of technology making a difference to people’s lives before backing further technologies and sectors as the Office evolves. One of the four initial technologies that the RIO will focus on is Artificial Intelligence and Digital in healthcare, which is set to revolutionise healthcare delivery. RIO will support the healthcare sector to deploy AI innovations safely, improving NHS efficiency and patients’ health outcomes. AI in the public and private sectors Government response to Committee conclusions and recommendations 16 – 20
Source
Report
Third Report - Governance of artificial intelligence (AI)
28 May 2024
HC 38
Addressee Bodies
Department for Science, Innovation and Technology
Timeline
Recommendation age
2.0 yrs
Report published
28 May 2024