The Proposed EU Artificial Intelli- gence Liability Directive: Does/Will Its Content Reflect Its Ambition?
TechReg 2024.014 Li & Schütte cover page
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Keywords

Artificial intelligence liability directive
damage liability
AI Act
disclosure of evidence
causal link
EU tort law

How to Cite

Li, S., & Schütte, B. . (2024). The Proposed EU Artificial Intelli- gence Liability Directive: Does/Will Its Content Reflect Its Ambition?. Technology and Regulation, 2024, 143-151. https://doi.org/10.71265/82fwbw94

Abstract

On 28 September 2022, the European Commission released its long-awaited proposal for an Artificial Intelligence Liability Directive (AILD). In contrast to the high expectations on providing a harmonised liability framework for the damage caused by AI systems, the proposed AILD only proposes minimum harmonised procedural rules to facilitate evidence disclosure and alleviate the burden of proof undertaken by claimants. This article provides a comprehensive analysis of the proposed AILD and points out the problems when implementing the proposed rules. This article argues that the AILD may never reach its full potential as its name indicates. The fragmentation among Member States regarding the substantive matters may preclude the AILD from moving a step further for harmonising substantial issues. While a comprehensive risk regulation (the EU AI Act) must be followed by an effective remedy mechanism, the proposed AILD will not fill this gap in the short run.

 

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Copyright (c) 2024 Shu Li, Béatrice Schütte