CMA Response to UK Government White Paper on AI Regulation

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The Competition and Markets Authority (“CMA”) has published a response to the recent UK Government White Paper “A pro-innovation approach to AI regulation”.
The CMA supports the government’s approach of leveraging and building on existing regulatory regimes whilst also establishing a central coordination function for monitoring and support. It highlights that AI is creating many opportunities for business to deliver more useful, accessible and personalised online services, but it also sees potential risks that AI can pose in its remit. These include incumbent firms’ ability to self-preference at the expense of new innovators, giving consumers false or misleading information, or insufficient transparency for consumers and businesses.
Here we highlight the key points from the CMA's response.
The CMA’s views on the White Paper
The CMA has four key messages: the CMA:
Statutory duties and AI Principles
The CMA agrees with government on the importance of monitoring the effectiveness of the non-statutory approach before moving to a statutory one.
The CMA also agrees that introducing a new duty for regulators to have due regard to the principles could increase the effectiveness of the principles’ use in AI regulation. However, the CMA cannot enforce those principles directly, but only when they intersect with the CMA’s existing duties and responsibilities.
Initial thinking on how the CMA will apply the White Paper framework
The CMA has started to consider how best it might be able to provide guidance on how it interprets the principles in relation to its remit. The CMA agrees that joint guidance with other regulators may be appropriate and recognises that any guidance must be consistent with existing guidance, and create further clarity, not confusion, for firms.
The CMA has set out detailed comments on the White Paper principles to help produce consistency in approach. In summary:
If you would like to discuss how current or future regulations impact what you do with AI, please contact Shachi Nathdwarawala, Tom Whittaker or Brian Wong or other member of Burges Salmon’s Technology or Competition team.
The CMA said: We support government’s approach of leveraging and building on existing regulatory regimes whilst also establishing a central coordination function for monitoring and support. We think this will achieve the context-specific approach to regulation that government is aiming for. We also see the benefits of a framework that is pro-innovation, proportionate, trustworthy, adaptable, clear, and collaborative.
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/response-to-governments-ai-white-paper