The goal will not sign the Code of Conduct of the European Commission for General Artificial Intelligence Models (GPAI), after considering that Europe is walking the wrong way to the subject.
“We carefully review the Code of Conduct of the European Commission for General Use Models (GPAI) and the goal will not sign it,” said Company’s head of global relations, Joel Kaplan, in an X record on Friday, 18.
“This code introduces a series of legal uncertainties for models developers, as well as measures that go far beyond the scope of the AI law,” said the executive.

Kaplan said companies and policy makers across Europe have spoken out against this regulation. Earlier this month, more than 40 of the largest European companies – including Siemens, Airbus and BNP – signed a letter requesting the commission to “stop the clock” in its implementation, he recalled.
“We share the concerns raised by these companies that this excess will limit the development and implementation of state -of -the -art AI models in Europe and damage European companies that seek to build business based on them,” he said.
The Code was designed to help the industry comply with the AM Law on general use AM, which will take effect on August 2, 2025 in the European Union. The purpose of the code is to ensure that general use models placed in the European market – including the most powerful – be safe and transparent, the European Commission said.
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According to the Commission, the signing of the Code would generate a reduction in administrative charges and will allow greater legal certainty compared to suppliers that prove compliance in other ways.