China seeks public feedback on draft rules for anthropomorphic AI services
BEIJING -- China's cyberspace regulator has released a draft interim governing anthropomorphic artificial intelligence (AI) interaction services for public consultation.
The draft, formulated by the Cyberspace Administration of China, aims to promote the sound development and standardized application of AI-powered anthropomorphic interaction services, the regulator announced on Saturday.
The document stipulates that providers and users of such services are prohibited from generating or spreading content that endangers national security, undermines national honor and interests, disrupts ethnic unity, facilitates illegal religious activities, or incites crime.
It also bans the dissemination of rumors that disrupt economic and social order, as well as activities that harm users' physical health or infringe upon their personal dignity and mental health.
Furthermore, the draft requires service providers to prominently notify users that they are interacting with an AI system, not a human being.
- China-Europe space science SMILE mission set for April 9 launch
- Former Taiwan People's Party chairman Ko Wen-je sentenced to 17 years in jail
- Visitors explore Grand Canal culture on Henan tour
- Long March 2D launches two satellites from Shanxi
- Journalists and content creators tour China's past, present and future in Henan
- China's experimental satellite constellation lays foundation for future lunar exploration
































