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Deadline to apply is 12:00 CET on 27 March (application form).
This is an opportunity to work in a team within the Directorate-General for Communications Networks, Content and Technology (DG CNECT) in the European Commission, supervising the world’s largest consumer market for AI. This team will be directly involved in enforcing the AI Act, the first global AI law, by overseeing compliance of general-purpose AI (GPAI).
The AI Office is empowered to request information from GPAI providers, analyse systemic risks stemming from these GPAI models, and investigate potential legal infringements as part of multi-disciplinary case teams. If necessary, it can require GPAI model providers to implement systemic risk mitigation measures, as well as restrict, recall, or withdraw the model from the market. Unlike other AI bodies that are monitoring the state-of-the-art, this Office will possess real regulatory enforcement powers not dependent on the grace of private corporations providing public access to their sought-after products.
This role will help to shape codes of practice for GPAI models through consultation with GPAI model providers, civil society organisations, industry and academia, and thereby to the enactment of e AI safety measures with global impact.
The AI Office will be at the frontier of developing tools, methodologies and benchmarks for capabilities evaluations, generating expertise within the European Commission and surfacing awareness of emergent dangerous model behaviours. It is a platform for converting the latest research into concrete actions that will improve AI safety for society.
Contingent on your experience, you may be involved in classifying models as systemic, as well as overseeing compliance with the more stringent measures that such classification entails (model evaluations, adversarial testing, cybersecurity-by-design, etc.), conducting evaluations and investigations when needed.
The AI Office bridges the gap between the scientific and policymaking communities. It will coordinate with the forthcoming scientific panel of independent experts, which can provide qualified alerts if it identifies a model that presents concrete EU-level risks or meets the threshold for designation as systemic (currently 10^25 FLOPS and above). It also serves as a central contact point for international AI safety collaboration with institutions like the US and UK AI Safety Institutes. This means it will tap into global AI networks to ensure that regulation can keep up with the rapid evolution of AI.
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Interviews will likely run from late spring to autumn 2024. The initial contract runs for one year for successful candidates.
This post was published on 22 Mar, 2024
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