Year in review: Artificial Intelligence Law in Germany

Germany’s AI Boom: Reshaping Industries and Public Services

Germany is increasingly adopting AI across various sectors, including automotive (self-driving tech), healthcare (diagnostics and drug development), manufacturing (AI robotics), finance (fraud detection), energy (renewable production), and public services (urban planning). 

Policy and Legislation Advancements

The German government plans to enhance funding for AI research by nearly €1 billion over two years, aiming to compete with leading nations like China and the U.S. This includes establishing 150 new AI research labs, boosting supercomputing capabilities, and increasing access to public datasets while prioritising safety and privacy in regulations. 

– Funding commitments are on par with those from the European Union, which allocates €1 billion yearly for AI through the Horizon Europe programme. 

Case Law

1. Palantir’s Surveillance Software: 

The German Federal Constitutional Court ruled Palantir’s surveillance technology unconstitutional, supporting concerns over predictive policing bias and errors. 

2. AI Inventorship:

The German Federal Patent Court ruled that AI systems cannot be recognised as inventors in patent applications, aligning with the global patent office’s position.

Source: Lexology

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