The EU AI Act is the world's first comprehensive AI regulation, setting the global standard for how AI systems should be governed. This resource provides access to the complete official text of Regulation (EU) 2024/1689, the landmark legislation that will reshape how AI is developed, deployed, and monitored across Europe and beyond. With its risk-based classification system, the Act distinguishes between minimal risk, high-risk, and prohibited AI applications, creating a legal framework that balances innovation with fundamental rights protection. This is the definitive source for understanding exactly what compliance looks like under the world's most ambitious AI governance regime.
The EU AI Act follows a phased implementation schedule that directly impacts when different organizations need to comply:
Understanding these dates is crucial because non-compliance isn't just a regulatory risk—it's a business continuity threat with fines up to €35 million or 7% of global annual turnover.
The Act's Annex III defines eight specific areas where AI systems automatically qualify as high-risk, each with detailed compliance requirements:
Biometric identification and categorization
Each category triggers specific technical documentation, risk management, data governance, and human oversight requirements that organizations must implement before deployment.
The Act establishes a complex web of responsibilities across the AI value chain. Providers (those who develop or substantially modify AI systems) bear the heaviest burden, including conformity assessments, CE marking requirements, and post-market monitoring obligations. Deployers (organizations using AI systems) must conduct fundamental rights impact assessments for high-risk systems and ensure human oversight protocols.
The regulation also introduces notified bodies—third-party organizations authorized to conduct conformity assessments—and establishes AI governance structures in each member state. The European AI Office will oversee general-purpose AI models, while national authorities handle most other enforcement activities.
While this is EU regulation, its extraterritorial effects mean the Act applies to any AI system that produces outputs used within the EU, regardless of where the system is developed or operated. This "Brussels Effect" makes the EU AI Act relevant for global technology companies, multinational corporations, and even smaller organizations that serve European customers or process EU resident data through AI systems.
The Act also establishes the foundation for international AI governance discussions, with other jurisdictions closely watching its implementation as a model for their own regulatory approaches.
Publicado
2024
Jurisdicción
Unión Europea
CategorÃa
Regulations and laws
Acceso
Acceso público
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