European Commission moves to standardise AI transparency obligations

The European Commission has published draft guidelines outlining how transparency obligations under Article 50 of the AI Act should be applied across certain AI systems. The guidance is intended to help competent authorities, providers and deployers ensure compliance in a consistent, effective and uniform manner.

Prepared in parallel with a separate Code of Practice on the marking and labelling of AI-generated content, the draft guidelines clarify the scope of legal obligations and address areas not covered by the code. The focus is on helping users identify when they are interacting with AI systems or encountering AI-generated content.

A targeted consultation is open until 3 June, allowing stakeholders to provide feedback on the draft framework. The consultation will inform the final version of the guidelines, which are intended to support more consistent implementation and enforcement of Article 50 obligations across the EU.

The initiative reflects a broader regulatory push in the European Union to strengthen oversight of AI transparency, particularly as generative AI tools become more widely used in content creation, communication and digital services.

Why does it matter?

Transparency obligations are central to the AI Act‘s approach to trust in digital environments. Clear disclosure and labelling requirements can help users understand when they are interacting with AI systems or encountering AI-generated material, reducing risks linked to manipulation, misinformation and misplaced reliance on machine-generated outputs.

Consistent guidance also matters for legal certainty. Providers and deployers need clearer expectations on how Article 50 applies in practice, while regulators need a common basis for enforcement across member states.

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UN Virtual Worlds Day to examine AI-driven cities

The International Telecommunication Union will host the 3rd UN Virtual Worlds Day at its headquarters in Geneva, bringing together UN entities, governments, city leaders, industry representatives and innovators to discuss the future of AI-driven cities and communities.

The UN Virtual Worlds Day is being organised with a wide group of UN and international partners, including ITCILO, FAO, UNDP, UNECA, UNECE, UNECLAC, UN-Habitat, UNICEF, the UN Innovation Network, UNU-EGOV, the World Bank, WIPO, WMO, and the Global Cities Hub.

The programme will include high-level dialogue and an Ambassador Roundtable focused on how artificial intelligence, immersive virtual environments, spatial intelligence, and other frontier technologies are shaping urban governance and public service delivery.

Discussions will also examine emerging concepts such as the AI-enabled citiverse, where digital and immersive technologies may be used to support planning, service design, and engagement in cities and communities.

The event will link these developments to the implementation of the Global Digital Compact, with a focus on trusted, inclusive, and people-centred outcomes for urban and community governance worldwide.

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China launches AI ethics review pilot programme

A national pilot programme for AI ethics review and services has been launched by China, as authorities move to strengthen oversight of growing risks linked to advanced AI systems.

The initiative, announced by China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, aims to establish practical mechanisms for AI ethics governance as concerns over algorithmic discrimination, emotional dependence, and broader societal risks continue to grow. Authorities said the initiative will initially operate in provincial-level regions hosting national AI industrial innovation pilot zones. It will focus on refining provincial AI ethics review rules, supporting the creation of ethics committees, and developing specialised ethics review and service centres. Chinese regulators also plan to transform the ethics review process into technical standards while improving mechanisms for reporting AI-related ethical concerns.

The Ministry of Industry and Information Technology has also called for the creation of a national AI ethics risk monitoring service network, along with training materials, ethics education courses, and early-warning systems to support pilot cities.

By embedding ethics reviews into AI development and deployment processes, China appears to be building a more institutionalised framework for managing the societal and technological risks associated with increasingly powerful AI systems.

Why does it matter?

China’s latest move signals a shift from broad AI governance principles towards operational enforcement mechanisms embedded directly into regional innovation ecosystems. The programme could influence how other governments approach AI oversight, particularly as global concerns grow over algorithmic bias, psychological manipulation, and accountability in frontier AI systems.

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AI productivity claims need stronger scrutiny according to Ada Lovelace Institute’s findings

The Ada Lovelace Institute has warned that AI productivity claims in the UK public sector need stronger scrutiny, as headline estimates are already shaping spending, workforce planning and public service reform.

In a policy briefing on AI and public services, the institute says UK government communications, industry reports and third-party analyses frequently present AI as a tool for cutting costs, saving time and boosting growth. It argues that stronger evidence is needed to assess whether those claims translate into public value.

The briefing notes that the UK’s 2025 Spending Review committed to ‘a step change in investment in digital and AI across public services’, informed by estimates of potential savings and productivity benefits that run as high as £45 billion per year.

Many current estimates rely on limited or uncertain evidence, the institute argues. Studies often measure first-order effects, such as time savings or cost reductions, while paying less attention to outcomes that matter for public services, including service quality, equity, citizen experience, institutional capacity and worker well-being.

The briefing also warns that productivity claims often fail to fully account for implementation costs, trade-offs, transition periods and the opportunity cost of prioritising AI investment over other public spending.

Several methodological concerns are identified in AI productivity research, including reliance on task automation models, self-reported surveys and limited triangulation across methods. The institute also highlights the growing use of large language models to assess which tasks they can perform, warning that this creates a circular dynamic in which AI systems are used to judge their own capabilities.

Headline figures can obscure mixed evidence, with productivity estimates varying widely and positive findings often receiving more attention than contradictory or null results. Industry involvement can also shape what gets researched and how results are framed, particularly when AI companies fund studies, provide tools or publish their own reports.

To improve the evidence base, the Ada Lovelace Institute calls for productivity research to reflect uncertainty, report ranges rather than single headline numbers and measure outcomes that matter for public services. It recommends more independent research, transparent methodologies, longer-term studies and measurement built into AI deployments from the start, including tracking service quality, error rates, staff well-being and citizen satisfaction.

Why does it matter?

Public-sector AI is increasingly being justified through promises of efficiency, savings and productivity growth. If those claims are based on weak or narrow evidence, governments risk making major investment and workforce decisions before understanding the real costs, trade-offs and effects on service quality.

The briefing is important because it shifts the question from whether AI can save time in isolated tasks to whether AI improves public services in practice. That includes outcomes such as fairness, reliability, staff well-being, citizen experience and institutional capacity, which are harder to measure than headline savings but central to public value.

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UK’s Ofcom prioritises child protection and AI moderation under Online Safety Act

The UK’s Ofcom has outlined its main online safety priorities for 2026–27, signalling tougher oversight of digital platforms under the UK’s Online Safety Act. The regulator said it will continue focusing heavily on child protection while expanding enforcement efforts against illegal hate speech, terrorism-related material, intimate image abuse, and AI-generated harms.

The regulator confirmed that more than 100,000 online services now fall within the scope of the legislation, creating major compliance and enforcement challenges. Ofcom said it will continue investigating platforms that fail to prevent harmful or illegal content, while also preparing new rules linked to additional UK legislation covering cyberflashing, non-consensual intimate imagery, and generative AI services.

Ofcom stated that major online platforms have already introduced broader age verification measures under regulatory pressure. Services including gaming, dating, social media, and pornography platforms have implemented stronger age checks and child safety protections.

Furthermore, the regulator said it will expand supervision of large technology companies and publish updated safety codes later this year, including guidance on AI-powered moderation systems.

According to Ofcom, future compliance work will increasingly focus on the effectiveness of platform moderation systems rather than relying solely on reactive content removal. The regulator also plans to strengthen protections for women and girls online through new technical standards designed to block the spread of non-consensual intimate images and sexual deepfakes at scale.

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FTC guidance sets out platform duties under Take It Down Act

The US Federal Trade Commission has issued guidance for online platforms on compliance with Section 3 of the Take It Down Act, which takes effect on 19 May 2026 and requires covered platforms to remove non-consensual intimate photos or videos within 48 hours of receiving a valid request.

The FTC says the law applies to a broad range of online platforms, including websites, apps, social media, messaging, image and video sharing, and gaming services. Platforms may fall under the law if they primarily provide a forum for user-generated content or regularly publish, curate, host, or furnish intimate content shared without consent.

Covered platforms must provide clear and conspicuous plain-language information about how people can submit removal requests for intimate photos or videos shared without consent. The FTC says platforms should make the process easy to use, including for people who do not have an account on the service.

The law also covers ‘digital forgeries’, including intimate images that were digitally created or altered using software, apps, or AI. Platforms that receive a valid request must remove the reported content and make reasonable efforts to locate and remove known identical copies within 48 hours.

The FTC also encourages platforms to help prevent removed images from spreading further, including through hashing technology and, where appropriate, by sharing hashes with services such as the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children’s Take It Down service or StopNCII.org.

Violations of the Take It Down Act will be enforced by the FTC and treated as violations of an FTC rule. The agency says platforms that breach the law may face civil penalties of $53,088 per violation.

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Australia launches national AI platform ‘AI.gov.au’

The Department of Industry, Science and Resources has announced the launch of AI.gov.au through the National Artificial Intelligence Centre. The platform is designed to help organisations adopt AI safely and responsibly in line with the National AI Plan.

AI.gov.au provides a central source of guidance, tools and resources to support businesses and not-for-profits. It aims to help users identify AI opportunities, plan implementation, manage risks and build internal capability.

The platform’s development was informed by research and engagement with industry and government, highlighting the need for clear starting points, practical advice and support for AI organisational change. It also supports the AI Safety Institute’s work by improving access to safety guidance.

Initial features focus on small and medium-sized enterprises and include training, case studies and adoption tools, with further updates planned. The initiative reflects efforts to strengthen AI uptake and governance in Australia.

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China outlines AI and energy integration plan

The Chinese National Energy Administration, alongside the National Development and Reform Commission, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology and the National Data Administration, has released an action plan to promote mutual development between AI and the energy sector.

The plan focuses on ensuring a reliable energy supply for computing infrastructure while using AI to support energy transformation. It outlines 29 key tasks covering green energy use, efficient coordination between power and computing, and expanding high-value AI applications in energy.

Authorities aim to significantly improve the clean energy supply for AI computing and strengthen AI adoption in energy by 2030. The strategy also seeks to enhance data use and drive innovation in AI models within the energy sector.

The agencies will establish coordination mechanisms across government and industry to support implementation and innovation. The initiative reflects a broader push to integrate AI and energy systems more deeply in China.

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EDPS frames safe AI as Europe’s next big idea

The European Data Protection Supervisor has framed safe and ethical AI as a defining European idea, linking AI governance to Europe’s history of collective initiatives rooted in shared values and fundamental rights.

In a Europe Day blog post, EDPS official Leonardo Cervera Navas argues that Europe’s approach to AI builds on earlier initiatives such as data protection, the creation of the EDPS and the adoption of the General Data Protection Regulation. He presents the AI Act as a continuation of that tradition, aimed at ensuring that AI systems operate safely, ethically and in line with fundamental rights.

The post highlights the AI Act’s risk-based model, which prohibits AI systems posing unacceptable risks to health, safety and fundamental rights, while setting binding requirements for high-risk systems in areas such as safety, transparency, human oversight and rights protection. It also notes that most AI systems are considered minimal risk and fall outside the regulation’s scope.

Cervera Navas also points to the EDPS’s practical role under the AI Act as the AI supervisor for the EU institutions, agencies and bodies. The post refers to the EDPS network of AI Act correspondents, the mapping of AI systems used in the EU public administration, and a regulatory sandbox pilot for testing AI systems in compliance with the AI Act.

The post also emphasises international cooperation, including EDPS engagement through the AI Board, cooperation with market surveillance authorities, UNESCO’s Global Network of AI Supervising Authorities, Council of Europe work on AI risk and impact assessment, and AI discussions within the OECD.

Why does it matter?

As it seems, EDPS wants Europe’s AI governance model to be understood not only as regulation, but as part of a broader rights-based digital policy tradition. Its significance lies in linking the AI Act with practical supervision, institutional coordination and international cooperation, suggesting that the next test for Europe’s AI approach will be implementation rather than rule-making alone.

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World Economic Forum analysis explores AI-driven future planning for organisations

A World Economic Forum article argues that organisations need to move beyond static reports and analytical forecasts to become more future-ready in an era marked by rapid technological and geopolitical change.

The article highlights FutureSlam, a foresight method that combines participatory scenario-building, AI-supported reflection and improvisational performance to help organisations experience possible futures rather than analyse them. The authors say many organisations already invest in foresight, but struggle to translate insights into operational decisions because they often remain confined to strategy teams and slide decks.

The approach integrates human imagination with AI-generated scenarios. Participants first develop scenarios themselves, before comparing them with future images generated by an AI system using the same trend material. The authors argue that this comparison can challenge assumptions, confirm parts of participants’ reasoning and introduce perspectives that human groups may avoid.

FutureSlam then uses improvised performance, including simulated news broadcasts and staged scenarios, to make possible futures more tangible. According to the article, the method is designed to make foresight more inclusive, structured and memorable by turning participants into co-creators rather than passive recipients of expert analysis.

The authors suggest that such approaches could help organisations adapt more effectively to technological, geopolitical and societal change by turning foresight into a shared organisational capability rather than a niche strategic exercise.

Why does it matter?

AI is increasingly being used not only to automate tasks, but also to support strategic thinking, scenario-building and organisational learning. The FutureSlam example points to a broader shift in how organisations may prepare for uncertainty: less focus on predicting precise outcomes, and more focus on building the capacity to test assumptions, imagine alternatives and adapt collectively.

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