OECD’s Principles on AI
The OECD Principles on Artificial Intelligence promote artificial intelligence (AI) that is innovative and trustworthy and that respects human rights and democratic values. They were adopted on 22 May 2019 by OECD member countries when they approved the OECD Council Recommendation on Artificial Intelligence. The OECD AI Principles are the first such principles signed up to by governments. Beyond OECD members, other countries including Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Peru and Romania have already adhered to the AI Principles, with further adherents welcomed. The OECD AI Principles set standards for AI that are practical and flexible enough to stand the test of time in a rapidly evolving field. They complement existing OECD standards in areas such as privacy, digital security risk management and responsible business conduct. On 9 June 2019, the G20 adopted human-centred AI Principles that draw from the OECD AI Principles. Read more here.
You might also like
-
Tech Salon recap: listen more and shift away from Western-centric framing to better address online violence against women and girls
-
Savita Bailur joins MTI as a Core Collaborator
-
Reviewing Mirca Madianou’s new book, “Technocolonialism: When Tech for Good is Harmful”
-
Welcoming our new AI+Africa Lead for the NLP-CoP: Vari Matimba