Das Europäische Parlament und der Rat haben sich auf eine Reihe von Änderungen der EU-KI-Verordnung (AI Act) geeinigt. Die vorläufige Einigung im Rahmen des sogenannten
The AI Regulation requires functioning governance structures. AI systems must be identified, evaluated, documented and monitored. In addition, processes must be provided in order to be able to react appropriately to incidents.
On November 19, 2025, the EU Commission presented the „Digital Omnibus” package. The aim is to simplify and harmonize the digital regulatory framework in the EU. Among other things,
AI models are interchangeable, but their effects are not. Whether a system poses a low or high risk does not depend on the technology, but on the intended use.
The AI Regulation obliges companies to create complete technical documentation for every AI system. However, the documentation obligation also provides the decisive lever for traceability and
From chatbots to scoring: every AI in a company needs measurable responsibility, clear evidence and a robust process. Those who take a structured approach now will protect data, brand value and
At the end of September, the European Commission launched a public consultation on guidelines and a reporting form for "serious AI incidents" in accordance with the AI Regulation. The aim is to,
At the latest when companies implement several parallel AI projects, a common basis for evaluation is essential. Otherwise, different specialist areas, models and application types can hardly be compared with each other. A central
While the use of AI in companies is increasing rapidly, the development of structures for responsible AI and its management is lagging behind. Several recent studies show