M/613 - Artificial Intelligence_Amd 1
Artificial Intelligence_Amd 1 to M/593
Mandate M/613 is an amendment to the original mandate M/593 concerning standardisation in the field of artificial intelligence (AI). Issued by the European Commission, this amendment updates and refines the standardisation requests directed to European Standardisation Organisations (ESOs) such as CEN, CENELEC, and ETSI. The goal is to support the development and harmonisation of AI standards that align with EU policies and regulatory frameworks, ensuring safe, trustworthy, and interoperable AI technologies across the European market. This mandate reflects evolving priorities in AI standardisation to foster innovation while addressing ethical, legal, and technical challenges.
Purpose
This mandate, M/613, serves as an amendment (Amd 1) to the original standardisation mandate M/593 related to Artificial Intelligence (AI). Its purpose is to update or expand the scope of the initial mandate to address evolving needs in the standardisation of AI technologies within the European Union.
Standardisation request
M/613 requests the development, revision, or alignment of European standards concerning Artificial Intelligence, building upon the work initiated under M/593. This may involve specifying requirements, guidelines, or frameworks to ensure interoperability, safety, and trustworthiness of AI systems. The amendment aims to reflect recent advances in AI capabilities and applications, as well as regulatory and policy developments.
Expected deliverables
Deliverables under this mandate amendment likely include updated sets of technical standards, protocols, and normative documents that can be used by industry, regulators, and other stakeholders. These standards should facilitate the harmonisation of AI technologies across the EU, support compliance with legal requirements, and provide a basis for certification or assessment schemes where applicable.
Context
The amendment M/613 is part of the EU's broader strategy to foster trustworthy and human-centric AI by providing a robust standardisation framework. It complements regulatory initiatives, such as the proposed AI Act, aiming to promote innovation while safeguarding fundamental rights and public interests. The continuation and update of the standardisation work through amendments like M/613 reflect the dynamic nature of AI technology and the need for standards to keep pace with technological and societal changes.
The mandate M/613 covers the standardisation work related to artificial intelligence (AI). It includes defining vocabulary, functional safety, robustness, transparency, and ethical aspects of AI systems. The scope addresses AI applications across multiple sectors and products, ensuring the development of harmonised standards to support trustworthy, safe, and reliable AI technologies within the EU market.
General Information
This document describes common capabilities, requirements and a supporting information model for logging of events in AI systems.
This document is designed to be used with a risk management system.
- Draft26 pagesEnglish languagee-Library read for1 day
This document specifies the evaluation of computer vision systems, in the sense of measuring the quality of a system’s results to
assess its functional suitability. It provides a definition of evaluation methods for those systems, together with guidance on how to
select, implement and interpret those evaluation methods. This document covers quantitative metrics as well as other evaluation
methods. It includes requirements on the implementation of the described metrics, and further requirements on the technical
resources involved in the evaluation process.
- Draft56 pagesEnglish languagee-Library read for1 day
This document specifies the requirements and provides guidance for the definition, implementation, maintenance and improvement of a quality management system for organizations that provide AI systems.
This document is intended to support the organization in meeting applicable regulatory requirements.
- Draft56 pagesEnglish languagee-Library read for1 day
This document specifies the evaluation of computer vision systems, in the sense of measuring the quality of a system’s results to
assess its functional suitability. It provides a definition of evaluation methods for those systems, together with guidance on how to
select, implement and interpret those evaluation methods. This document covers quantitative metrics as well as other evaluation
methods. It includes requirements on the implementation of the described metrics, and further requirements on the technical
resources involved in the evaluation process.
- Draft56 pagesEnglish languagee-Library read for1 day
This document describes common capabilities, requirements and a supporting information model for logging of events in AI systems.
This document is designed to be used with a risk management system.
- Draft26 pagesEnglish languagee-Library read for1 day
This document specifies the requirements and provides guidance for the definition, implementation, maintenance and improvement of a quality management system for organizations that provide AI systems.
This document is intended to support the organization in meeting applicable regulatory requirements.
- Draft56 pagesEnglish languagee-Library read for1 day
Frequently Asked Questions
A European Standardization Mandate is a formal request from the European Commission to the European Standardization Organizations (CEN, CENELEC, and ETSI) to develop European standards (ENs) in support of EU legislation and policies. Mandates are issued under Regulation (EU) No 1025/2012 and help ensure that products and services meet the essential requirements set out in EU directives and regulations.
M/613 is a European Standardization Mandate titled "Artificial Intelligence_Amd 1 to M/593". Artificial Intelligence_Amd 1 to M/593 There are 6 standards developed under this mandate.
Standards developed in response to a mandate and cited in the Official Journal of the European Union become "harmonized standards". Products manufactured in compliance with harmonized standards benefit from a presumption of conformity with the essential requirements of the corresponding EU directive or regulation, facilitating CE marking and market access across the European Economic Area.