The Council of the European Union has now given its final green light to a targeted package of amendments to the EU AI Act, marking a decisive shift from framework-setting to implementation. The changes—part of the “Omnibus VII” simplification agenda—aim to reduce regulatory friction while preserving the Act’s risk-based architecture.
For lawyers and compliance teams, the headline development is timing. Key obligations for high‑risk AI systems are deferred, with new application dates set for December 2027 (stand‑alone systems) and August 2028 (product-integrated systems). This provides welcome breathing room, but not a pause. Organizations should be using this time to build governance frameworks and technical controls.
The amendments also sharpen substantive guardrails. New prohibitions target AI systems generating non‑consensual intimate content and child sexual abuse material, reflecting a clear policy priority around fundamental rights protection.
At the same time, the EU is tightening certain compliance expectations. Transparency deadlines for AI‑generated content are accelerated, and regulatory sandbox timelines are adjusted to better align with implementation realities.
Overall, this is a recalibration, not a rollback. The EU remains firmly committed to global AI regulation, but with a more pragmatic timeline and clearer enforcement pathway. For businesses operating in or into the EU, the message is clear: prepare now, because enforcement is coming—just on a more coordinated schedule.

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