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While the EU and US are taking steps to protect people
at work from AI, UK government is “sitting on its hands”, says
union body
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Lack of certainty is bad for workers and employers, TUC
tells ministers ahead of AI summit
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UK employment law urgently needs updating, says
TUC
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Union bodies not invited to Bletchley Park event
despite immediate risks to workers
The TUC has today (Wednesday) warned that the UK risks becomes an
“international outlier” in failing to regulate AI in the
workplace.
The warning comes as world leaders and tech companies meet in
England today for the government’s AI safety summit.
The TUC says that while the likes of the EU and the US are taking
steps to regulate the use of AI at work, the UK government is
“sitting on its hands”.
The EU is just months away from passing ground-breaking
legislation to deal with the use of AI.
And President Biden announced on Monday an executive order that
will see federal agencies deployed to monitor the risks of
artificial intelligence.
The order will include measures to support workers and unions,
including:
- protections against job displacement
- protections for health and safety, equality and data
collection
- instructions to US employers not to use AI in ways that
violates workers’ rights
The TUC says the EU and US’ approach is in stark contrast to that
of , who said in a speech last
week that he “will not rush” to regulate AI.
Urgent need for guardrails
In September the TUC launched a
new AI taskforce and is calling for “urgent” new legislation
to safeguard workers’ rights and to ensure AI benefits all.
The union body says AI is already making “high-risk, life
changing” decisions about workers’ lives – such as line-managing,
hiring and firing staff.
And AI is being used to analyse facial expressions, tone of voice
and accents to assess candidates’ suitability for roles.
Left unchecked, this could lead to greater discrimination,
unfairness and exploitation at work across the economy, the
taskforce warns.
Meanwhile employers are purchasing and using systems without
knowing fully the implications, such as whether they are
discriminatory.
Excluded from summit
Despite AI posing immediate harms to people at work, the TUC –
and other trade union bodies – were not invited to the summit at
Bletchley Park.
The TUC joined with wider civil
society on Monday in criticising the summit for marginalising
communities and workers “most affected by AI”.
In an open letter to the Prime Minister – signed by more than 100
UK and international organisations – the government was
criticised for overly-focusing on speculative risks instead of AI
threats in the here and now.
TUC Assistant General Secretary Kate Bell said:
“AI has huge implications for rights at work. It is already
making life-changing decisions over how people are hired,
performance-managed and fired.
“Without proper guardrails workers are at real risk of
discrimination and exploitation.
“But while the likes of America and the EU are acting to protect
their workforces, our government is sitting on its hands.
“This is not good enough. We urgently need new employment
legislation, so workers and employers know where they stand.
“We all have a shared interest in getting this right.”
Commenting on the exclusion of trade unions – and wider civil
society – from the summit Kate added:
“This summit was a historic chance to bring together a wide range
of voices to discuss both the immediate and long-term threats AI
poses.
“But instead of looking to forge a broad-based consensus,
ministers have chosen to exclude workers’ groups.
“This can’t continue. AI is already transforming the way millions
work. Unions must be given a seat at the table.”
ENDS
Notes to editors:
More information on President Biden’s executive order can be
found here: https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2023/10/30/fact-sheet-president-biden-issues-executive-order-on-safe-secure-and-trustworthy-artificial-intelligence/
Leading Senator Chuck Schumer has convened a series of AI Insight
Forums on behalf of the Biden Administration. The forums are
together a wide range of parties to discuss the use of AI in
society and regulation. The TUC’s international sister trade
union confederation AFL-CIO https://aflcio.org/ has been
invited to both the Forums that have taken place so far:
https://techpolicy.press/us-senate-ai-insight-forum-tracker/
The EU AI Act is likely to be enacted next year: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/news/en/headlines/society/20230601STO93804/eu-ai-act-first-regulation-on-artificial-intelligence
The TUC has previously called for a number of protections to be
enshrined in law including:
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A legal duty on employers to consult trade
unions on the use of “high risk” and intrusive forms of AI in
the workplace.
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A legal right for all workers to have a human
review of decisions made by AI systems so they can
challenge decisions that are unfair and discriminatory.
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Amendments to the UK General Data Protection Regulation
(UK GDPR) and Equality Act to guard against
discriminatory algorithms.