Federal government’s open-source AI model automates the retrieval of applicable law and its application to infrastructure projects to reduce approval times.
Estonia plans to equip AI agents with their own digital identities to make their actions on behalf of citizens and businesses legally traceable and to limit permissions granularly.
26 percent of German companies use AI technologies, while Benelux countries are significantly ahead with better data skills and higher software maturity.
Google is implementing the use of IP addresses from European users for ad personalization, despite the company itself having previously criticized this method as problematic for device identification.
The EU Parliament anchors the ban on synthetic nude image generators in the AI Act, thereby clarifying the limits on the misuse potential of AI systems.
Estonia’s identification number system for AI agents creates traceability of authorities and will serve as a blueprint for regulatory requirements in other jurisdictions.
German companies increasingly want to make cloud infrastructure more sovereign but are not yet willing to accept significant performance losses – while European alternatives remain unavailable.
The EUDI-Wallet will only succeed if identity verification and qualified electronic signature are seamlessly integrated and enterprises align their IT architectures to it before 2027.
Two new European Digital Infrastructure Consortia were established, the IPCEI major projects are now fully operational, and two additional consortia are in formation.
Various AI-specific frameworks such as ISO/IEC 42001 and NIST AI RMF address different aspects of AI governance and risk control — the right choice depends on an organization’s specific gaps.