EU AI Act (Regulation 2024/1689)
Summary
The EU AI Act (Regulation 2024/1689) is the world's first comprehensive horizontal AI regulation. It establishes a risk-based classification system with four tiers: unacceptable (banned), high-risk (strict obligations), limited-risk (transparency), and minimal-risk. High-risk AI systems in areas like employment, credit, law enforcement, and critical infrastructure must undergo conformity assessments, maintain technical documentation, implement risk management systems, and ensure human oversight. General-purpose AI models face transparency and systemic risk obligations. Penalties reach up to 35 million EUR or 7% of global turnover. Prohibitions applied from February 2025; high-risk and GPAI rules apply from August 2025-2026.
Affected Requirements
Nexara AI Analysis
Narrative
- The EU AI Act represents the most comprehensive AI regulation globally
- establishing mandatory compliance obligations across the entire AI system lifecycle. The organization's AI systems
- particularly the Acme Hiring Screener and Employee Resume Screener
- likely qualify as high-risk AI systems under Annex III point 4(a) for employment screening
- triggering extensive obligations including conformity assessments
- technical documentation
- risk management systems
- and human oversight requirements. The Fraud Detection Pipeline may also qualify as high-risk under Annex III point 2 for credit institution operations. Immediate compliance action is required given the regulation's phased implementation timeline
- with prohibitions effective February 2025 and high-risk system obligations applying from August 2026. Non-compliance carries severe financial penalties up to 35 million EUR or 7% of global annual turnover. The Customer Support Chatbot and Content Moderation System face transparency obligations under Article 52
- requiring clear disclosure of AI system deployment to users. All systems must implement appropriate technical and organizational measures to ensure compliance with the risk-based regulatory framework.
AI-Specific Regulation
Yes — this regulation specifically targets AI systems
Recommended Actions
- Conduct immediate classification assessment for all AI systems against EU AI Act risk categories
- with particular attention to the Acme Hiring Screener and Employee Resume Screener as potential high-risk employment systems under Annex III
- Implement comprehensive risk management system per Article 9 for any high-risk systems
- including continuous risk identification
- estimation
- evaluation and mitigation measures throughout the system lifecycle
- Establish technical documentation requirements per Article 11
- including detailed system specifications
- training data characteristics