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AI

The EU AI Act has come into force and brings with it far-reaching changes for the development and use of AI in Europe. Companies, public authorities and providers of AI systems must now prepare for the upcoming regulations and deadlines. Those who act now can avoid unnecessary risks and benefit from timely adaptation. In my blog post, you can find out which steps are necessary and which deadlines you need to keep in mind.

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AI

12.08.2024 By Jonas Reinhardt and Marina Žagar

Creating trust, ensuring compliance: AI governance as a success factor

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The rapid development of artificial intelligence (AI) opens up new opportunities for companies, but also presents them with regulatory and ethical challenges. Our AI Governance Check helps companies to meet the complex requirements of the AI Regulation (EUKIVO) and other standards, minimise risks and strengthen stakeholder trust. We show how this works in our blog post.

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Industries

At the end of February 2024, the International Association of Standardisation Organisations (IAF/ISO) decided to include the aspect of climate change and climate adaptation as a mandatory addition to the existing standard requirements in chapters 4.1 and 4.2. This blog post presents topics that may become relevant for companies in this context.

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Methodology

14.02.2024 By Mohammad Qasem

An introduction to the EU Data Act

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European legislators have imposed strict regulation on the digital space in recent years. In addition to the much-discussed EU IoT Act, other important regulations such as the Data Governance Act and the Data Act have come into force. The Data Act in particular has attracted special attention due to its impact on IoT device manufacturers, service providers and start-ups. The Data Act, which entered into force on 11 January 2024, will apply from September 2025. In my blog post, I discuss its objectives, effects and requirements for all stakeholders.

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AI

The Artificial Intelligence Act (AI Act) was finalised at the end of 2023 after intensive negotiations between the European Parliament and the European Council. The debates were characterised by talks on the definition of AI and the categorisation of systems into risk classes. Numerous details were clarified, in particular regarding unacceptable risk (highest risk level) AI systems and high-risk AI systems. National interests and the development of certain technologies played an important role, such as the ban on real-time biometric identification in public spaces and the use of foundation models or generative AI. I will show you in this blog post what the EU AI Act looks like in detail.

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AI

Artificial intelligence (AI) technology is set to play a key role in shaping the coming industrial revolution. With the EU AI Act, the European Union is taking a leading role on the global stage. But what about other major powers like the US and the People’s Republic of China? In my blog post, I would like to outline the differences and similarities between the approaches each one is taking.

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Industries

In an increasingly digitalised world where data is transmitted to other countries, it is essential that personal data is protected. This is especially true when it comes to the cross-border transfer of health data. In this blog post, I will explain what impact the Data Privacy Framework has on the transfer of health data between the EU and the US and what effect this has on how digital health apps are run.

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Industries

Working on and supporting projects in the life sciences sector means dealing with a whole host of regulatory requirements. In this blog post, I will provide an overview of which standards, regulations, laws and guidelines might be involved and what impact they have on project management.

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AI

The European Union’s proposed AI Act will make working with artificial intelligence (AI) on a daily basis even more complex. Some potential AI applications might end up on a blacklist, while others remain untouched, but in a way, both applications use the same technology. It feels like AI roulette. The entire situation is poised to cause doubts during the idea phase of potential AI applications – namely, is my AI idea allowed? This is a question that crops up a lot at the moment.

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