Tag
ComplianceAgent is an open-source CLI tool that scans AI projects for EU AI Act compliance, covering 12 articles and generating PDF reports, offering a free alternative to expensive enterprise solutions.
LangChain's LangSmith enables developers to use tracing as compliance evidence for the EU AI Act, with customizable evaluators for bias, hallucination, toxicity, accuracy, and adversarial inputs.
The EU AI Act mandates that from August onwards, all AI-generated text, images, audio, and video must be watermarked and metadata-tagged, with two layers of machine-detectable identification. This applies to any provider accessible to EU citizens, regardless of location, and includes open-source models, facing fines up to €35 million.
Apertus is a fully open foundation model for sovereign AI, developed by the Swiss AI Initiative. It is open weights, open data, open science, compliant with EU AI Act, and competitive with top open models at 8B and 70B parameters, supporting over 1000 languages.
The EU AI Act's compliance deadlines begin in 47 days, requiring AI agent builders to adhere to specific transparency, risk management, and documentation rules.
Discusses potential long-term societal and economic consequences of AI regulatory laws like the EU AI Act and US executive orders, focusing on unintended effects and startup burden.
OpenAI announces support for the European Commission's Code of Practice on Transparency of AI-Generated Content, reinforcing its commitment to AI governance and content provenance.
This paper investigates whether LLMs can identify their own model family from stylometric fingerprints in role-constrained political analysis texts, even after prompt-level anonymization. The findings confirm that anonymization is insufficient and have implications for EU AI Act compliance and multi-agent system validation.
Miles Brundage announces his appointment to the EU's AI Scientific Panel, which will help implement the AI Act, and notes that the EU invited global applicants.
A critical analysis of how AI regulation consistently lags 3-5 years behind deployment, examining the EU AI Act's delayed implementation and the fragmented US regulatory landscape, raising questions about whether current governance models can keep pace with rapid frontier advances.
This opinion piece argues that the EU AI Act's broad regulation of algorithms could have severe unintended consequences for software development, potentially criminalizing common programming practices.
The EU AI Act enforcement for high-risk systems begins August 2, 2026, requiring automatic decision logging, log retention, documentation, and human oversight, with fines up to 35M euros or 7% of global turnover for non-compliance.
The article discusses how companies can integrate EU AI Act compliance into their product development from the design phase, highlighting transparency, guardrails, and human oversight as key architectural changes.
OpenAI announces its decision to sign the EU AI Act's Code of Practice for General Purpose AI, which takes effect August 2, 2025, demonstrating commitment to compliance through industry-leading safety measures including its Preparedness Framework, System Cards, and Red Teaming Network.