Comentários sobre o artigo intitulado “A regulação da responsabilidade pela utilização da ia: comentário crítico a duas recentes propostas de diretiva: a (nova) DRIA e a (revista) DRP”, de Beatriz Garcia

Autores

  • Maria de Lemos Campos Faculdade de Direito da Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal

Palavras-chave:

AI liability; AI Act; AILD; PLD; Regulatory Framework

Resumo

This commentary expands on Beatriz Garcia’s critique of the Artificial Intelligence Liability Directive (AILD) and the revised Product Liability Directive (PLD), focusing on their interaction with the recently enacted AI Act. Garcia identifies key issues: the PLD’s narrow focus on software as a “product” and the AILD’s burdensome evidentiary requirements for claimants seeking AI-related compensation. The AI Act, effective August 2024, establishes a risk-based regulatory framework prioritizing harm prevention over liability. While fostering innovation through regulatory sandboxes, it lacks civil compensation mechanisms, creating regulatory gaps. Case studies—an autonomous vehicle fatality and discriminatory AI hiring practices—highlight the difficulties of applying AILD and PLD frameworks, particularly in addressing non-physical harm and the “black box” nature of AI systems. This analysis underscores a disconnect between the AI Act’s harm-prevention focus and the liability frameworks, favoring companies while complicating compensation for individuals. A recalibrated regulatory approach is needed to align innovation with accountability.

Publicado

2024-12-30

Edição

Secção

Thematic Issue