Brussels has released a practical guide to assist companies in preparing for the upcoming enforcement of the AI Act. The document outlines detailed requirements for general-purpose AI models across three key areas: transparency, copyright, and safety.
Developers are tasked with documenting data sources used for training, providing audit interfaces, and implementing filters to protect copyrighted content. Safety requirements mandate the conduct of red-teaming exercises and risk assessments to identify potential vulnerabilities.

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These regulations will become mandatory on August 2, 2025, with the publication signaling the regulator’s refusal to delay timelines despite business requests for extensions. Non-compliance could result in fines of up to €35 million or 7% of a company’s annual turnover.

