Company: CNTB
Filing Date: 2025-11-12
Form Type: 10-Q
Source: 0001835268-25-000058
Chunk: 65

Company: Connect Biopharma Holdings Ltd
Filing Date: 2025-11-12
Form: 10-Q
Item: Part I, Item 8
Chunk 65
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 discovery and development, some of which have more resources than we do and may have developed more effective methods than we and any third-party collaborators have, which may reduce our and any third-party collaborators’ effectiveness in identifying potential targets and attracting additional collaborators to work with us. If our competitors are able to utilize new technologies more effectively (including but not limited to those that may involve AI or be created using AI) to discover, develop and commercialize products that compete with any of our product candidates or potential commercial products, such technologies could adversely impact our ability to compete.

Further, AI presents additional risks and challenges, especially as the use of these technologies becomes more important to our operations over time. Generative AI may be used improperly or inappropriately which could lead to the tainting of our proprietary information and render us unable to qualify for certain patent or trade secret protection. Its use by people, including our vendors, employees, suppliers and contractors, with access to our proprietary and confidential information, including trade secrets, may continue to increase and may lead to the release of such information, which may impact our ability to realize the benefit of our intellectual property. The increasing use of AI and machine learning in drug discovery and development introduces new and evolving risks related to ownership, inventorship, and protection of intellectual property generated by or with the assistance of AI technologies. Regulatory and legal frameworks governing AI-generated inventions are still developing and may create uncertainty regarding our ability to secure and enforce rights in such inventions. Our use of generative AI platforms may lead to novel and urgent cybersecurity and privacy risks, which may adversely affect our operations and reputation, as well as the operations of any third-party collaborators. Emerging ethical issues surround the use of AI, and we may be subject to reputational and legal risk if our deployment or use of AI becomes controversial. Regulators could limit our, or any third-party collaborator’s ability to develop or implement AI-based technologies as part of measures taken against us or any third-party collaborators in particular or as a consequence of broader legislation, which could have an adverse effect on our or any third-party collaborator’s business, results of operations and financial conditions. Several jurisdictions around the globe, including Europe and the U.S., have proposed, enacted, or are considering laws governing the development and use of AI/Machine Learning, such as the EU’s AI Act and the Colorado Artificial Intelligence Act. For example, the EU AI Act, which entered into force on August 1, 2024 and most provisions of which will become effective on August 2,