China approves a law and a draft code of conduct to regulate the work of marches and artificial intelligence

Beijing, December 27 / WAM / China issued a law and a draft code of conduct today to regulate the work of marches and artificial intelligence.
Official media reported that China had approved an amended law that, for the first time, officially regulates drone flights.
The Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress of China approved the amendments to the Civil Aviation Law and added a clause regarding certification.
Drone airworthiness fills a key regulatory gap.
The approval of this amendment came at a time when China’s low-altitude economy is expected to grow – a national strategic initiative
Focusing on commercial air activities of less than 3,000 meters – to more than two trillion yuan ($280 billion) by 2030, from 1.5
Trillion yuan in 2025, according to estimates by the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Peking University and the Civil Aviation Administration of China.
Under the new rules that will come into effect on July 1, all entities must participate in designing drones
Its production, import, maintenance and operation obtain an airworthiness certificate.
China has implemented “temporary regulations” for drones starting in 2024, stipulating that civilian marches must be registered with real names.
The regulations also stipulate that small, light and small unmanned civil aircraft do not require an airworthiness certificate, while
Medium and large aircraft were required to apply to the Civil Aviation Authority to obtain this certificate.
Drone logistics services have become an important driver of China’s low-altitude economy, as 2.7 million packages containing
Various shipments from sandwich meals to life-saving medicines through 2024, according to Ministry of Transport data.
Meanwhile, the Chinese Cyberspace Authority today issued draft rules to tighten control over…
Artificial intelligence services designed to simulate human personalities and interact emotionally with users.
The proposed rules will apply to artificial intelligence products and services provided to consumers in China that display human personality traits and patterns
Thinking and communication styles that are simulated, and interact with users emotionally through text, images, audio, video, or other means.
The draft sets out a regulatory approach that requires service providers to warn users of excessive use and to intervene when it appears on the Internet.
Users signs of addiction.
Under this proposal, service providers will bear safety responsibilities throughout the product life cycle and establish systems to review algorithms and security.
Data and personal information protection.
These procedures define red lines for content and behavior, and stipulate that service providers must not create content that would threaten security.
Nationalistic, spreading rumors, or promoting violence or obscenity.
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