AI Act Standards Face Delays as Deadlines Approach
Delays in EU AI Act technical standards mean companies may face uncertainty until at least 2026 as standardization bodies work to ensure compliance and consensus.
Delays in EU AI Act technical standards mean companies may face uncertainty until at least 2026 as standardization bodies work to ensure compliance and consensus.
The EU is set to issue its first Digital Markets Act fines to Apple and Meta, intensifying digital regulation enforcement amid rising EU-US trade tensions.
More than half of EU Member States have missed the deadline to implement the NIS2 cybersecurity directive, leaving critical sectors exposed to heightened cyber risks.
MEPs urge the European Commission to adopt a strict definition of open source AI in the AI Act, excluding models with restrictive licensing like Meta’s Llama.
The EU is reviewing its AI Act to simplify compliance for businesses, balancing industry demands for flexibility with the law’s original goal to ensure accountability and mitigate AI risks.
The EU prioritizes compliance over punishment in enforcing the Digital Markets Act, with fines for Apple and Meta signaling its commitment to regulating Big Tech effectively.
The AI Board convened today to discuss EU AI policy, national governance strategies, compliance support, and deliverables for the AI Act, advancing coordinated AI governance across Member States.
The EU enforces DMA rules on Apple, mandating interoperability for iOS features, while Apple warns of innovation delays, privacy risks, and increased costs.
Six critical infrastructure sectors in the EU face compliance challenges under the NIS2 directive due to cybersecurity gaps, while electricity, telecoms, and banking lead in maturity.
Apple avoids EU fines by complying with Digital Markets Act, while regulators impose penalties for other violations, targeting practices that limit competition and consumer choice.