European Parliament committees have advanced detailed rules to carry out the EU’s AI Act, pushing the bloc closer to a clearer regulatory framework for generative AI and major online platforms. The proposal aims to spell out how companies must disclose when content is produced by AI and how regulators can enforce the law across the European market.
The latest step adds specificity to a landmark law designed to manage risks from artificial intelligence while preserving space for innovation. Lawmakers are focusing on transparency duties for developers of generative AI tools, an area that has drawn growing concern as AI-generated text, images, and video spread quickly across digital services.
The measures also seek tougher oversight of platforms that operate in the European Union, reflecting wider global pressure on tech firms to better police harmful or misleading content. Supporters say clearer implementation rules are needed to prevent the law from becoming too vague to enforce.
The committees’ approval does not finalize the rules, but it signals momentum in one of the world’s most closely watched efforts to regulate artificial intelligence. The debate now moves toward the next stages of legislative approval and eventual enforcement across the bloc.
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