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Written for executives and legal leaders making consequential decisions about AI — not for developers.
Featured · Strategy
Enterprises are buying AI capabilities embedded in SaaS platforms, APIs, and cloud services at pace. The EU AI Act, UK AI Framework, and every major governance regulation hold the deploying organisation — not the vendor — responsible for what those systems do. Here is what that means for the decisions you are making right now.
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Your AI vendor is not responsible for your compliance. You are.
The EU AI Act holds the deploying organisation responsible for vendor-supplied AI. Here is what that means for every platform, API, and embedded model in your enterprise.
Governance
Article 9 places human oversight obligations at the organisational level. Most boards are being briefed on the regulation — very few are being briefed on what it structurally requires.
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Risk
Every week, teams across your organisation are connecting AI tools to business processes without a governance review. The regulatory obligation follows the deployment — not the approval.
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Strategy
The assumption that governance slows deployment is wrong — and the evidence is now clear. The enterprises shipping agentic AI at scale are the ones where compliance is a structural property of the system.
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Governance
When a regulator asks you to demonstrate how a specific AI decision was made, the answer needs to come from the system — not from a retrospective reconstruction.
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Risk
Autonomous AI systems making consequential decisions without a human in the loop are in production today. The legal implications are significant. The architectural resolution is specific.
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Strategy
UK, Canada, Singapore, and the US are all accelerating their own frameworks. The enterprises that design to the EU AI Act standard find those frameworks are already satisfied.
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