Large enterprises are adopting Artificial Intelligence more than small and medium-sized ones, with significant differences in the way each of them uses the technology. View on euronews
AI’s rapid market proliferation and regulatory expansion mirrors privacy’s, and businesses should model their contractual AI compliance on the successes of privacy law’s DPA and BAA.
One of the main problems of the EU AI Act is its risk-based approach to AI regulation. Under the Act, AI systems are classified by their risk level, and high-risk systems will be subject to the most strict requirements. This classification system is problematic for several reasons:
The Italian Data Protection Authority has halted DeepSeek AI over concerns about its handling of Italians' private data. Ireland and Belgium have also requested information from the Chinese company regarding the model's use of European data.
In the EU, the AI Act has been approved, carrying significant implications for medical device, technology, and pharmaceutical firms. In the US,
An important facet of AI regulation is where in the supply chain AI should be regulated—specifically, whether to regulate the developers (builder) or deployers (user) of AI.
The EU AI Act strikes a balance between AI innovation & safety. It establishes clear guidelines for risk management, ongoing monitoring, & human supervision.
Contributors Erica Werneman Root, Monica Mahay and Hatla Færch Johnsen describe the process of designing a comprehensive AI literacy program that fits the organizational context.
TALLINN - StartupBlink, which analyzes the potential of countries around the world for establishing and developing successful startups, named Estonia the best ecosystem in the European Union for developing artificial intelligence (AI) startups.
The EU has used trumped-up ‘antitrust’ complaints as a device to loot U.S. high tech companies for years. The appropriate response should be retaliation.
The world’s most significant and far-reaching AI regulation is about to kick into gear, and companies have been readying their compliance while waiting for clarifying guidance.
AI, biotech and affordable clean energy will be the focus of an EU drive to make the bloc globally competitive and ensure it keeps pace with rivals the United States and China, according to a draft European Commission paper seen by Reuters.