Artificial Intelligence Act - EU AI Act Podcast Por Inception Point Ai arte de portada

Artificial Intelligence Act - EU AI Act

Artificial Intelligence Act - EU AI Act

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Welcome to "The European Union Artificial Intelligence Act" podcast, your go-to source for in-depth insights into the groundbreaking AI regulations shaping the future of technology within the EU. Join us as we explore the intricacies of the AI Act, its impact on various industries, and the legal frameworks established to ensure ethical AI development and deployment.

Whether you're a tech enthusiast, legal professional, or business leader, this podcast provides valuable information and analysis to keep you informed and compliant with the latest AI regulations.

Stay ahead of the curve with "The European Union Artificial Intelligence Act" podcast – where we decode the EU's AI policies and their global implications. Subscribe now and never miss an episode!

Keywords: European Union, Artificial Intelligence Act, AI regulations, EU AI policy, AI compliance, AI risk management, technology law, AI ethics, AI governance, AI podcast.

Copyright 2025 Inception Point Ai
Economía Política y Gobierno
Episodios
  • EU AI Act Crunch Time: Compliance Deadlines Loom as Europe Tightens the Screws on Big Tech
    Mar 12 2026
    Imagine this: it's early March 2026, and I'm huddled in a Brussels café, steam rising from my espresso as I scroll through the latest on the EU AI Act. The air buzzes with urgency—deadlines loom like storm clouds over the tech horizon. Just days ago, on March 5, the European Commission dropped the second draft of its voluntary Code of Practice for labeling AI-generated content, straight out of Article 50's transparency playbook. This isn't some dusty guideline; it's a streamlined blueprint for developers and deployers, blending secured metadata with digital watermarking, even floating a standardized EU icon to flag deepfakes and synth-text before they flood our feeds.

    Think about it, listeners. Prohibited AI practices—think manipulative social scoring or emotion recognition in workplaces—have been banned since February 2025, with fines up to 7% of global turnover. Article 4's AI literacy training? Enforceable then too, yet Ajith P.'s analysis reveals most US enterprises, even those piping AI into Europe via Article 2's extraterritorial hooks, haven't documented a single session. Five months from August 2, 2026, when high-risk obligations hit—Annex III's risk management, data governance, CE marking for systems in recruitment, credit scoring, biometrics—and panic sets in. Banks in Virginia profiling customers? Automatically high-risk, no exceptions, per the appliedAI Institute's study of 106 enterprise systems.

    Yet paradoxes abound. Bruegel warns the Commission risks enforcement bias amid US trade tensions, while EY notes the Digital Omnibus might stretch high-risk timelines to December 2027 if standards from CEN/CENELEC land in Q4 2026. Finland's already enforcing via full powers since December 2025; Germany's Bundesnetzagentur gears up. Meanwhile, the European Parliament just greenlit the EU's signature on the Council of Europe's Framework Convention on AI—co-led by José Cepeda and Paulo Cunha—cementing global baselines for human rights, democracy, and auditability that dovetail with the AI Act's phased rollout.

    Euronews reports Parliament pushing a registry for copyrighted works in AI training, clashing with CCIA's cries of a creativity-killing tax. As a techie pondering this, I wonder: will watermarking tame the chaos of generative AI, or stifle innovation? The Act, Regulation 2024/1689 since August 2024, aims to balance it all, setting a benchmark experts at the World Economic Forum hail as world-first. But with GPAI models under EU AI Office scrutiny since August 2025, one thing's clear—compliance isn't optional; it's the new OS upgrade.

    Thanks for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more deep dives. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

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    3 m
  • # EU AI Act Crunch: August 2026 Deadline Faces Potential Delays as Europe Battles Over Compliance Rules
    Mar 9 2026
    Imagine this: it's early March 2026, and I'm huddled in a Berlin cafe, laptop glowing amid the hum of espresso machines, scrolling through the latest frenzy over the EU AI Act. Listeners, as we hit this pivotal moment just months before the August 2, 2026 deadline, when most provisions slam into effect—including ironclad rules for high-risk AI systems like those in recruitment, credit scoring, and critical infrastructure—the stakes feel electric. The Act, Regulation (EU) 2024/1689, born in June 2024 and alive since August 1 that year, isn't just bureaucracy; it's a risk-based blueprint reshaping how we build and wield AI across the 27 member states.

    But hold on—tensions are spiking. The European Parliament is pushing the Digital Omnibus package, a sweeping tweak to digital laws, as reported by ECIJA on March 3. This could delay high-risk obligations past August 2026, tying them to the rollout of harmonized standards from CEN and CENELEC—think risk management frameworks, dataset governance, and cybersecurity safeguards. Original timelines eyed December 2, 2027 for Annex III systems and August 2, 2028 for Annex I, but only if standards lag. Civil society, over 50 groups strong, is railing against it, per AI CERTs analysis, warning of rights erosion and legal uncertainty. The European Data Protection Board and Supervisor echo this, slamming the flux in a joint opinion. Meanwhile, Spain's Ministry of Digital Transformation opened public hearings on the Omnibus, closing February 8—your input could have shaped it.

    For companies, it's scramble time. Elydora's compliance guide urges gap analyses now: audit your AI for logging under Article 12, data quality per Article 10, human oversight via Article 14. HeyData predicts a compliance renaissance—AI Compliance Officers, governance committees, automated monitoring tools becoming table stakes. High-risk deployers in the EU, or targeting its 450 million users, face fines up to 7% of global turnover. Yet, innovation beckons: the EU AI Office, nestled in the Commission, oversees general-purpose models like those from OpenAI, while transparency codes for AI-generated content drop this summer.

    Think deeper—what if these delays birth smarter standards, not loopholes? Europe's forcing AI to evolve from black-box wizardry to auditable intellect, converging with AMLA's March data grabs in Frankfurt and eIDAS 2.0 digital wallets. Firms like those in finance are pouring cash into explainable AI, per ComplyAdvantage, turning regulation into edge. But will startups drown while giants like Google glide? As Parliament committees amend through spring, trilogues loom by autumn—watch Brussels closely.

    Listeners, the EU AI Act isn't halting progress; it's channeling it. Proactive builders will thrive in this accountable future.

    Thank you for tuning in—please subscribe for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

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    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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    4 m
  • EU's AI Act Hits Awkward Phase: Rules in Force, But Nobody Knows What Happens Next
    Mar 7 2026
    The European Union’s Artificial Intelligence Act has entered that awkward teenager phase where it is technically in force, but no one is entirely sure how it’s going to behave in the wild. The law has been live since August 2024, yet the real crunch comes with the 2025–2028 rollout: bans already active, general-purpose AI rules kicking in, and high-risk obligations looming while the clock and the politics both wobble.

    Here is the tension: on paper, August 2026 was supposed to be the big bang for high-risk AI systems, from biometric ID to hiring tools to credit scoring. Compliance guides from companies like heyData and Repello tell you to treat that date as the point when your AI governance, documentation, and monitoring must be fully operational. They talk about inventories of models, training data, metrics, post‑market surveillance – essentially an AI bill of materials wrapped in risk management.

    But in Brussels, the implementation story has become much messier. JD Supra recently highlighted that the European Commission already missed its February 2026 deadline to publish guidance on what exactly counts as “high-risk.” That delay rides on top of another problem: the European standardization bodies, CEN and CENELEC, also slipped their timeline for the technical standards that are supposed to anchor compliance. Without those standards, the Act’s elegant risk-based architecture starts to look like a half-built bridge.

    Enter the so‑called Digital Omnibus package. Ecija and AI CERTs describe how Parliament and Council are now trying to retune the AI Act mid‑flight: explicitly adding AI agents to the definition of AI systems, expanding banned practices to tackle things like non‑consensual sexualized deepfakes, and – crucially – decoupling high‑risk obligations from that fixed August 2026 date. Instead, key duties would only bite once harmonized standards and detailed guidelines actually exist, with backstop deadlines stretching into late 2027 and 2028.

    This is more than bureaucratic housekeeping. At Harvard’s Petrie‑Flom Center, scholars warn that in domains like medical AI, overlapping regimes – the AI Act plus medical device law – risk either strangling innovation or hollowing out protections if simplification goes too far. Bruegel, in turn, argues that enforcement capacity is becoming a geopolitical weapon: the EU wants to police Big Tech and general‑purpose models via the new AI Office, but without veering into protectionism or paralysis.

    So listeners are watching a live experiment in regulatory choreography. On one side, startups and SMEs, represented by groups like SMEunited, complain they cannot comply with rules that are still being written. On the other, civil society fears that every delay hardens the power of foundation model providers and surveillance vendors before the guardrails lock in.

    The real question for you, as someone building or deploying AI, is not whether the EU AI Act will matter, but whether you treat this uncertainty as an excuse to wait, or as a forcing function to map your systems, document their guts, and design human oversight that would stand even if Brussels vanished tomorrow. Because whatever date the politicians finally settle on, regulators, auditors, and courts are converging on the same expectation: if your AI can meaningfully affect a person’s life, you should be able to explain what it does, why it did it, and how you would know when it goes wrong.

    Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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    For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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    5 m
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