BRIN to Issue Policy on Use of AI in Research Industry
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11 December 2023 22:09 WIB
TEMPO.CO, Jakarta - The National Research and Innovation Agency (BRIN) head Laksana Tri Handoko said artificial intelligence or AI has the potential to violate people's intellectual property rights.
Intellectual property rights are defined as the right to obtain legal protection for intellectual property, including trademarks, licenses, copyrights, and industrial designs.
“The use of AI has the potential to violate other people's intellectual property, whether they realize it or not. In the meantime, we will include this issue in the form of a code of ethics for the use of AI,” Handoko told Tempo at the BRIN Office, on Monday, Dec. 11.
Handoko said the issue of AI potentially infringing on intellectual property has emerged in recent years. As a result, there are no clear regulations on it.
BRIN, he added, will prohibit the use of AI that has the potential to violate other people's intellectual property rights, one of which is through a code of ethics. “But there is also the potential to regulate it in a law,” Handoko said.
He agreed that using AI without responsibility could potentially violate other people's intellectual property rights. “We must not intentionally or not, directly or indirectly, violate other people's intellectual property without consent,” he concluded.
The European Union reached an agreement on artificial intelligence rules on Friday, Dec. 8, paving the way for legal oversight of AI technology. With this political agreement, the EU is the first power in the world to enact comprehensive laws on AI.
ALIF ILHAM FAJRIADI
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