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Page de couverture de Artificial Intelligence Act - EU AI Act

Artificial Intelligence Act - EU AI Act

Artificial Intelligence Act - EU AI Act

Auteur(s): Inception Point Ai
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À propos de cet audio

Welcome to "The European Union Artificial Intelligence Act" podcast, your go-to source for in-depth insights into the groundbreaking AI regulations shaping the future of technology within the EU. Join us as we explore the intricacies of the AI Act, its impact on various industries, and the legal frameworks established to ensure ethical AI development and deployment.

Whether you're a tech enthusiast, legal professional, or business leader, this podcast provides valuable information and analysis to keep you informed and compliant with the latest AI regulations.

Stay ahead of the curve with "The European Union Artificial Intelligence Act" podcast – where we decode the EU's AI policies and their global implications. Subscribe now and never miss an episode!

Keywords: European Union, Artificial Intelligence Act, AI regulations, EU AI policy, AI compliance, AI risk management, technology law, AI ethics, AI governance, AI podcast.

Copyright 2025 Inception Point Ai
Politique Économie
Épisodes
  • EU AI Act Transforms Into Live Operating System Upgrade for AI Builders
    Dec 8 2025
    Let’s talk about the week the EU AI Act stopped being an abstract Brussels bedtime story and turned into a live operating system upgrade for everyone building serious AI.

    The European Union’s Artificial Intelligence Act has been in force since August 2024, but the big compliance crunch was supposed to hit in August 2026. Then, out of nowhere on November 19, the European Commission dropped the so‑called Digital Omnibus package. According to the Commission’s own announcement, this bundle quietly rewires the timelines and the plumbing of the AI Act, tying it to cybersecurity, data rules, and even a new Data Union Strategy designed to feed high‑quality data into European AI models.

    Here’s the twist: instead of forcing high‑risk AI systems into full compliance by August 2026, the Commission now proposes a readiness‑based model. ComplianceandRisks explains that high‑risk obligations would only really bite once harmonised standards, common specifications, and detailed guidance exist, with a long‑stop of December 2027 for the most sensitive use cases like law enforcement and education. Law firm analyses from Crowell & Moring and JD Supra underline the same point: Brussels is effectively admitting that you cannot regulate what you haven’t technically specified yet.

    So on paper it’s a delay. In practice, it’s a stress test. Raconteur notes that companies trading into the EU still face phased obligations starting back in February 2025: bans on “unacceptable risk” systems like untargeted biometric scraping, obligations for general‑purpose and foundation models from August 2025, and full governance, monitoring, and incident‑reporting architectures for high‑risk systems once the switch flips. You get more time, but you have fewer excuses.

    Inside the institutions, the AI Board just held its sixth meeting, where the Commission laid out how it will use interim guidelines to plug the gap while standardisation bodies scramble to finish technical norms. That means a growing stack of soft law: guidance, Q&As, sandboxes. DLA Piper points to a planned EU‑level regulatory sandbox, with priority access for smaller players, but don’t confuse that with a safe zone; it is more like a monitored lab environment.

    The politics are brutal. Commentators like Eurasia Review already talk about “backsliding” on AI rules, especially for neighbours such as Switzerland, who now must track moving targets in EU law while competing on speed. Meanwhile, UK firms, as Raconteur stresses, risk fines of up to 7 percent of global turnover if they sell into the EU and ignore the Act.

    So where does that leave you, as a listener building or deploying AI? The era of “move fast and break things” in Europe is over. The new game is “move deliberately and log everything.” System inventories, model cards, training‑data summaries, risk registers, human‑oversight protocols, post‑market monitoring: these are no longer nice‑to‑haves, they are the API for legal permission to innovate.

    The EU AI Act isn’t just a law; it’s Europe’s attempt to encode a philosophy of AI into binding technical requirements. If you want to play on the EU grid, your models will have to speak that language.

    Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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    4 min
  • HEADLINE: "The EU's AI Act: A Stealthy Global Software Update Reshaping the Future"
    Dec 6 2025
    Let’s talk about the EU Artificial Intelligence Act like it’s a massive software update quietly being pushed to the entire planet.

    The AI Act is already law across the European Union, but, as Wikipedia’s timeline makes clear, most of the heavy-duty obligations only phase in between now and the late 2020s. It is risk‑based by design: some AI uses are banned outright as “unacceptable risk,” most everyday systems are lightly touched, and a special “high‑risk” category gets the regulatory equivalent of a full penetration test and continuous monitoring.

    Here’s where the past few weeks get interesting. On 19 November 2025, the European Commission dropped what lawyers are calling the Digital Omnibus on AI. Compliance and Risks, Morrison Foerster, and Crowell and Moring all point out the same headline: Brussels is quietly delaying and reshaping how the toughest parts of the AI Act will actually bite. Instead of a hard August 2026 start date for high‑risk systems, obligations will now kick in only once the Commission confirms that supporting infrastructure exists: harmonised standards, technical guidance, and an operational AI Office.

    For you as a listener building or deploying AI, that means two things at once. First, according to EY and DLA Piper style analyses, the direction of travel is unchanged: if your model touches medical diagnostics, hiring, credit scoring, law enforcement, or education, Europe expects logging, human oversight, robustness testing, and full documentation, all auditable. Second, as Goodwin and JDSupra note, the real deadlines slide out toward December 2027 and even August 2028 for many high‑risk use cases, buying time but also extending uncertainty.

    Meanwhile, the EU is centralising power. The new AI Office inside the European Commission, described in detail on the Commission’s own digital strategy pages and by several law firms, will police general‑purpose and foundation models, especially those behind very large online platforms and search engines. Think of it as a kind of European model regulator with the authority to demand technical documentation, open investigations, and coordinate national watchdogs.

    Member states are not waiting passively. JDSupra reports that Italy, with Law 132 of 2025, has already built its own national AI framework that plugs into the EU Act. The European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights has been publishing studies on how to assess “high‑risk AI” against fundamental rights, shaping how regulators will interpret concepts like discrimination, transparency, and human oversight in practice.

    The meta‑story is this: the EU tried to ship a complete AI operating system in one go. Now, under pressure from industry and standard‑setters like CEN and CENELEC who admit key technical norms won’t be ready before late 2026, it is hot‑patching the rollout. The philosophical bet, often compared to what happened with GDPR, is that if you want to reach European users, you will eventually design to European values: safety, accountability, and human rights by default.

    The open question for you, the listener, is whether this becomes the global baseline or a parallel track that only some companies bother to follow. Does your next model sprint treat the AI Act as a blocker, a blueprint, or a competitive weapon?

    Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next deep dive into the tech that’s quietly rewriting the rules of everything around you. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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    For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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    4 min
  • EU's AI Regulation Delayed: Navigating the Complexities of Governing Transformative Technology
    Dec 4 2025
    The European Union just made a seismic shift in how it's approaching artificial intelligence regulation, and honestly, it's the kind of bureaucratic maneuver that could reshape the entire global AI landscape. Here's what's happening right now, and why it matters.

    On November nineteenth, the European Commission dropped a digital omnibus package that essentially pumped the brakes on one of the world's most ambitious AI laws. The EU AI Act, which entered into force on August first last year, was supposed to have all its teeth by August 2026. That's not happening anymore. Instead, we're looking at December 2027 as the new deadline for high-risk AI systems, and even further extensions into 2028 for certain product categories. That's a sixteen-month delay, and it's deliberate.

    Why? Because the Commission realized that companies can't actually comply with rules that don't have the supporting infrastructure yet. Think about it: how do you implement security standards when the harmonized standards themselves haven't been finalized? It's like being asked to build a bridge to specifications that don't exist. The Commission basically said, okay, we need to let the standards catch up before we start enforcing the heavy penalties.

    Now here's where it gets interesting for the listeners paying attention. The prohibitions on unacceptable-risk AI already kicked in back in February 2025. Those are locked in. General-purpose AI governance? That started August 2025. But the high-risk stuff, the systems doing recruitment screening, credit scoring, emotion recognition, those carefully controlled requirements that require conformity assessments, detailed documentation, human oversight, robust cybersecurity—those are getting more breathing room.

    The European Parliament and Council of the EU are now in active negotiations over this Digital Omnibus package. Nobody's saying this passes unchanged. There's going to be pushback. Some argue these delays undermine the whole point of having ambitious regulation. Others say pragmatism wins over perfection.

    What's fascinating is that this could become the template. If the EU shows that you can regulate AI thoughtfully without strangling innovation, other jurisdictions watching this—Canada, Singapore, even elements of the United States—they're all going to take notes. This isn't just European bureaucracy. This is the world's first serious attempt at comprehensive AI governance, stumbling forward in real time.

    Thank you for tuning in. Make sure to subscribe for more on how technology intersects with law and policy. This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease dot ai.

    Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs

    For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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    3 min
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