Europe, the AI Continent.

One year ago, we launched the AI Continent Action Plan. Since then, we have made huge strides:

✅ 19 AI factories are now live across EU countries.
✅ We established the AI Skills Academy to train experts.
✅ The AI Omnibus is cutting costs for business.
✅ We have earmarked €1 billion to support AI adoption in industry.

We are building a secure and innovative AI future for Europe.

Here's how 👉 https://link.europa.eu/nj3VH9

@EUCommission no one wants this stuff
Hi @peachymist! Artificial intelligence already plays a crucial role in our daily lives, and as AI develops, it holds even greater potential to improve the lives of EU citizens: enhancing disease prevention, reducing traffic fatalities, anticipating cyber threats, and much more. That's why we are proposing rules and actions for AI, enabling us to harness its full potential and maximise its benefits.
@EUCommission @peachymist I'd like Europe to be the AI-free continent.
@Gargron @EUCommission @peachymist I think it’s important to differentiate between Generative AI (ChatGPT et all) and machine learning (ML) AI. ML can help automate and optimise loads of tasks across industries, and Europe should be on the edge of this instead of eating whatever the US spits out.

It makes sense to invest, and it makes sense to explore.

@kevin @Gargron @EUCommission @peachymist

Fully agree, there is a (big) difference between the two.

As an example, ML is extremely useful and good at translation languages — and that’s already since well before the chatbots started. Also a lot of other breakthroughs in science are done or improved with ML, and not GenAI, like protein folding.

While ML can be considered as a part of AI, it should be clearly separated from the LLMs which are, simply put, just random word combiners.