Sumtrix
  • Home
  • News
  • AI
  • Cyber
  • GRC
  • Blogs
  • Live CVE
No Result
View All Result
Sumtrix
  • Home
  • News
  • AI
  • Cyber
  • GRC
  • Blogs
  • Live CVE
No Result
View All Result
Sumtrix
No Result
View All Result
Home AI

Global Tech Companies Brace for Impact as EU Finalizes AI Regulations

by Jane Doe
May 28, 2025
in AI
A A
0
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Tech giants are preparing any sizeable changes to their operations and strategies, amid a plan by the EU to bring in wide ranging Artificial Intelligence (AI) regulation.

Highly touted as the ‘world’s first ever legal framework of AI’, the much-anticipated AI Act will impose extensive obligations over companies providing AI-based goods or services in the EU, irrespective of where they are established.

The EU’s AI Act employs a risk-based system, tiering AI systems into varying degrees of risk – unacceptable, high, medium and low. Those considered to entail an “unacceptable risk” — like those intended for social scoring or real-time identification using biometric data in public areas (with some exceptions for law enforcement) — will not be allowed.

High-risk AI systems – such as those implemented in critical infrastructures and fields such as education, employment, or essential services – will have to adhere to strict data and performance requirements, as well as to ensure transparency or human oversight.”

Read Also

FDA finalizes guide for premarket considerations to address medical device cybersecurity risks

Security Research Event 2025 took place in Warsaw

Similarly, general-purpose AI (GPAI) systems such as large language models will be subject to certain transparency requirements: revealing that a content was generated with AI and descriptors of the copyright-protected data that the model was trained on.

Stricter rules will apply to more powerful GPAI models where there is potential for systemic risk, including rigorous testing and incident reporting.

The repercussions for global tech companies are significant. These organizations will have a lot of catching up to do in investing in compliance, potentially re-architecting their AI development and deployment paths, and even redesigning products and services so they can meet EU criteria.

Failure to do so could yield heavy fines, of up to 7% of a company’s total worldwide annual turnover or €35 million, whichever is greater.

Some tech giants have raised concerns about stifling innovation and the complexity of the regulations —but others have said they are open to working the EU to ensure that AI can be served responsibly.

With the Act being gradually implemented, some prohibitions having already taken effect starting February 2025, and more requirements gradually introduced over the next few years, companies have a narrow window to adjust.

Experts speculate that the “Brussels Effect” ( EU rules become de facto global standards ) will once again apply to AI governance frameworks all over the world. Global corporations are paying close attention to how the AI Act turns out, realizing that such regulation could mold the future of AI regulation far beyond Europe.

“We’re not out of the woods yet and the next few months will be critical as the sector reels from the detail of the finalised regulations and tries to steer a course through to compliance in this new era for AI governance.

Jane Doe

You May Also Likes!

ZTE Unveils AI-Driven Autonomous Network Strategy at TM Forum’s DTW Ignite
AI

Two major US tech companies (Amazon, Microsoft) announce mass layoffs amid Artificial Intelligence boom

by Jane Doe
June 27, 2025
ZTE Unveils AI-Driven Autonomous Network Strategy at TM Forum’s DTW Ignite
AI

Prime Minister Paetongtarn Positions Thailand as Regional AI Ethics Leader: Official Launch of AIGPC at the UNESCO Global Forum on the Ethics of AI 2025

by Jane Doe
June 27, 2025
ZTE Unveils AI-Driven Autonomous Network Strategy at TM Forum’s DTW Ignite
AI

Vietnam’s Nguyen Thi Phuong Thao Urges Ethical AI Future at UNESCO Forum

by Jane Doe
June 27, 2025
ZTE Unveils AI-Driven Autonomous Network Strategy at TM Forum’s DTW Ignite
AI

MojiWeather Further Advances Its Technology to Use Artificial Intelligence and Data Analytics

by Jane Doe
June 27, 2025
ZTE Unveils AI-Driven Autonomous Network Strategy at TM Forum’s DTW Ignite
AI

Huawei Highlights 5G-A Growth, Scenario-Based AI Advancements

by Jane Doe
June 27, 2025
Load More

Recommended

Enhance Your Cybersecurity on World Environment Day with KnowBe4’s Expert Guide

Enhance Your Cybersecurity on World Environment Day with KnowBe4’s Expert Guide

June 5, 2025
New Windows RAT Exploits Corrupted Headers for Stealthy Evasion

New Windows RAT Exploits Corrupted Headers for Stealthy Evasion

May 31, 2025
23andMe Faces £2.31 Million Fine From ICO for Insufficient Data Security

23andMe Faces £2.31 Million Fine From ICO for Insufficient Data Security

June 23, 2025

Kimsuky Exploits BlueKeep RDP Vulnerability to Breach Systems in South Korea and Japan

April 21, 2025
London Hospital Cyberattack: Report Blames Hackers for Patient’s Death

FDA finalizes guide for premarket considerations to address medical device cybersecurity risks

June 27, 2025
London Hospital Cyberattack: Report Blames Hackers for Patient’s Death

Security Research Event 2025 took place in Warsaw

June 27, 2025
London Hospital Cyberattack: Report Blames Hackers for Patient’s Death

Cyberattack Cripples Glasgow City Council’s Online Services

June 27, 2025
London Hospital Cyberattack: Report Blames Hackers for Patient’s Death

FBI Traced IntelBroker to UK Citizen Using Email, Crypto Wallet, and YouTube Clues

June 27, 2025
Sumtrix.com

© 2025 Sumtrix – Your source for the latest in Cybersecurity, AI, and Tech News.

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Advertise

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • AI
  • Cyber
  • GRC
  • Blogs
  • Live CVE

© 2025 Sumtrix – Your source for the latest in Cybersecurity, AI, and Tech News.

Our website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.