The EU's A.I. Act sets a global precedent for AI regulation, aiming to balance innovation with safety. Focusing on high-risk AI applications| WinBuzzer
Hugging Face, GitHub, and other open source AI stakeholders are calling on the EU to support open source AI in the EU AI Act.| WinBuzzer
Markus has been covering the tech industry for more than 15 years. He is holding a Master´s degree in International Economics and is the founder and managing editor of Winbuzzer.com.| WinBuzzer
Europe's AI Act sets risk-based rules for developers. High-risk AI faces stricter guidelines, with some uses banned.| WinBuzzer
The researchers at CRFM focused on 12 out of the 22 requirements directed at foundation model providers that could be assessed using publicly available information.| WinBuzzer
Japan is considering a more lenient approach to regulating artificial intelligence (AI) than the European Union's AI Act.| WinBuzzer
Responding to geopolitical shifts, Microsoft has pledged legally binding resilience, expanded EU cloud capacity, and committed to European data/cyber rules.| WinBuzzer
The Trump administration has formally objected to the EU's draft AI Code of Practice, arguing it's overly burdensome and escalates tech regulation tensions.| WinBuzzer
Strict guidelines on AI risk levels take hold across Europe, barring controversial applications and imposing steep fines for violations| WinBuzzer