'General Purpose' AI Providers Must Now Comply With EU AI Act. Enforcement Won't Be Straightforward
6 Articles
6 Articles
The new Artificial Intelligence (AI) Act came into force on Saturday. The new rules in Europe will primarily affect large AI model providers, such as ChatGPT and Gemini. However, experts criticize the fact that the rules are coming late. They also complain that it was not clear until the last moment how exactly the rules should be interpreted.
On 2 August 2025, the first obligations of the Artificial Intelligence Regulation (RIA) in respect of artificial intelligence models came into force throughout the European Union (EU)
The AI Act, a European regulation on artificial intelligence (AI), has been in force since February 2024, despite opposition from some companies. It imposes obligations on general-purpose AI models, including comprehensive technical documentation, a copyright policy and a summary of training data. Non-compliant companies face fines of up to EUR 15 million or 3% of their global turnover.
Operators must disclose how their systems work and what data they have been trained with.
Innovations, in particular, include providing clearer information about the training of AI models and better protection of copyright.
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