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Artigo

7 mai 2026

Author:
Reuters

EU: Council & Parliament agree to water down AI Act as part of "Digital Omnibus"

"EU countries, lawmakers clinch provisional deal on watered-down AI rules"

EU countries and European Parliament lawmakers on Thursday agreed to watered-down landmark artificial ‌intelligence rules, including delaying their implementation, in a move critics say shows Europe caving in to Big Tech.

The tentative agreement, which needs formal approval from EU governments and the European Parliament in the coming months, followed nine hours of negotiations. [...]

The changes to the ⁠AI Act, which entered into force in August 2024 with key provisions phased in, are part of a broader ​European Commission push to simplify a slew of new digital rules.

The simplification drive came after businesses complained about overlapping regulations ​and red tape hampering their ability to compete with U.S. and Asian rivals.

DELAY

EU governments and lawmakers agreed to delay rules on high-risk AI systems such as those involving biometrics or related to critical infrastructure and law enforcement to December 2, 2027, from a previous ​deadline of August 2 this year.

They also agreed to exclude machinery from the AI Act as it is already ​subject to sectoral rules, following calls from businesses such as Germany's Siemens and Dutch company ASML.

There was agreement too on a ban ‌on AI ⁠practices that create unauthorised sexually explicit images, a move responding to such content generated by Elon Musk's xAI chatbot Grok on X and sexually intimate deepfakes produced by Grok. The ban will apply from December 2. [...]

Mandatory watermarking of AI-generated output will apply from December 2.

The European Consumer Organisation lamented the weaker AI Act ⁠while ​tech lobbying group CCIA said lawmakers and governments should have gone further.

The ​AI rules, which were triggered by concerns about the impact of the technology on children, workers, companies and cybersecurity, are still considered the strictest ​in the world even after the changes.

Part of the following timelines

Towards an EU Artificial Intelligence Act

EU: Updates on the 'digital Omnibus' proposal by the European Commission