Law

Frederick Rieländer

Die Anknüpfung der Produkthaftung für autonome Systeme

Volume 87 () / Issue 2, pp. 264-305 (42)
Published 03.04.2023

The Private International Law of Product Liability and AI-related Harm.– As the EU moves ahead with extensive reform in all matters connected to artificial intelligence (AI), including measures to address liability issues regarding AI-related harm, it needs to be considered how European private international law (PIL) could contribute to the EU’s objective of becoming a global leader in the development of trust-worthy and ethical AI. To this end, the article examines the role which might be played in this context by the conflict-of-law rule concerning product liability in Article 5 of the Rome II Regulation. It shows that the complex cascade of connecting factors in matters relating to product liability, although providing legal certainty for market players, fails to consistently support the EU’s twin aim of promoting the up-take of AI, while ensuring that injured persons enjoy the same level of protection irrespective of the technology employed. Assessing several options for amending the Rome II Regulation, the article calls for the introduction of a new special rule con-cerning product liability which allows the claimant to elect the applicable law from among a clearly defined number of substantive laws. Arguably, this proposal offers a more balanced solution, favouring the victim as well as serving the EU’s policies.
Authors/Editors

Frederick Rieländer ist Direktor am Zentrum für Europäische Rechtspolitik (ZERP) und Inhaber des Lehrstuhls für Bürgerliches Recht, Internationales und Europäisches Privatrecht, Zivilverfahrensrecht und Rechtsvergleichung an der Universität Bremen.


https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8280-9166