Online harms bill should cover AI chatbots, say some on Ottawa’s advisory group
OTTAWA — Some of the experts Ottawa has tasked with giving it direction on the upcoming online harms bill say the legislation should cover AI chatbots, while opinion on the idea of age restrictions for access to social media is more varied.
Emily Laidlaw, a law professor at the University of Calgary and a member of Ottawa’s online harms advisory panel, said she doesn’t see how the government can reintroduce online harms legislation without addressing a technology that is “facilitating some of the most harm to vulnerable adults and children.”
In March, the government reconvened an expert group it previously consulted on an earlier iteration of that bill, which did not become law before last year’s election was called.
Since then, safety issues linked to artificial intelligence-based chatbots and the idea of age restrictions for social media have both emerged as global political issues.


