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.
The Allianz Risk Barometer 2026 shows how the use of AI is becoming one of the biggest business risks for companies worldwide. One major problem: in many
The latest „Cyber Pulse: An AI Security Report“ from Microsoft warns against the uncontrolled use of shadow AI agents. Which concrete measures guarantee significantly higher security.
Artificial intelligence is quietly finding its way into software as an update, as part of regular version updates. For the governance of the company, this means that something is happening
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,
A few companies are currently receiving letters from data protection supervisory authorities regarding the use of AI tools. The supervisory authorities apparently want to obtain an up-to-date overview of the use of artificial intelligence in companies.
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
With the entry into force of the second implementation phase of the AI Regulation on August 2, 2025, the general rules for general purpose AI (GPAI) providers will be activated. We give
Since February 2, 2025, the first bans on unjustifiable AI practices and AI competence obligations have been binding. Since August 2, 2025, specific GPAI rules have applied in the AI Regulation ("General-Purpose
A central component of the AI Regulation is the prohibition of certain AI practices that are considered incompatible with the fundamental values of the Union. The European Commission has now