Nearly one-fifth of AI-using enterprises consider it feasible to partially replace academics with AI-supported employees of lower qualification levels.
NIS2 requires executive officers to assume direct responsibility for cybersecurity governance and incident reporting, with violations potentially resulting in personal liability.
Germany currently has only just under three gigawatts of data centre capacity, with 500 megawatts for AI, but must expand to up to six gigawatts—delays caused by local resistance jeopardize global competitiveness.
Digital sovereignty is forcing European enterprises to restructure their IT infrastructure and requires board-level decisions on cyber risk, sanctions resilience, and regulatory compliance.
The planned BSIG amendment mandates executive leadership training in NIS2 requirements and establishes cybersecurity governance as a legally binding management responsibility.