Artificial Intelligence in the European Union

Regulatory guidance / voluntary codes in the European Union

In order to ensure the consistent, effective, and uniform application of the EU AI Act across the European Union, the European Commission has adopted some guidelines (that are non-binding since only the Court of Justice of the European Union has authoritative interpretation powers) on the following provisions of the text:

Further guidelines on high-risk AI systems are expected, and are currently under consultation. The Commission released the final version of its general-purpose AI Code of Practice on 10 July 2025, and followed it up by publishing Guidelines on the scope of obligations for general-purpose AI model providers on 18 July 2025.

Under the EU AI Act, providers of AI systems that do not fall under the high-risk classification, as well as deployers, have the possibility to adopt voluntary codes of conduct (Article 95) in order to adopt, on a non-binding basis, technical solution and industry best practices. Because of this, it is expected that the AI office will issue further codes of conduct (which will be distinct from the GPAI Code of Practice).

In May 2024, the Council of Europe published a Framework Convention on Artificial Intelligence and Human Rights, Democracy and the Rule of Law (Framework). It is an international, legally binding treaty aiming to ensure that activities within the lifecycle of AI systems are fully consistent with human rights, democracy and the rule of law, whilst being conducive to technological progress and innovation.

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