Italy's ban on conversational artificial intelligence (AI) ChatGPT sparked major controversy among the tech industry as well as in the country. The Italian Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini expressed criticism that the block over privacy concerns seemed excessive.
On Friday, following concerns raised by the national data agency about possible privacy violations and failure to verify the age of users, Microsoft-backed OpenAI took ChatGPT offline in Italy. This action by the independent agency marked the first instance of a Western country taking measures against a chatbot that operates on artificial intelligence.
Italian Deputy Prime Minister took to Instagram to share his thoughts: "I find the decision of the Privacy Watchdog that forced #ChatGPT to prevent access from Italy disproportionate,” says a translated version of his post.
Salvini expressed that the regulator's move was hypocritical as there are dozens of services based on artificial intelligence and named examples like Bing’s chat. Salvini said that common sense was needed as "privacy issues concern practically all online services.”
The ChatGPT ban could harm national business and innovation, Salvini said, adding that he hoped for a rapid solution to be found and for the chatbot's access to Italy to be restored.
"Every technological revolution brings great changes, risks, and opportunities. It is right to control and regulate through international cooperation between regulators and legislators, but it cannot be blocked," he said.
Another objection to the ban was heard from Ron Moscona, a partner at the international law firm Dorsey & Whitney in its London office and an expert in technology and data privacy. He said the ban by the Italian regulators comes as a
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