AI Act: Why Polish Companies Must Focus on Risk, Not Technology

The EU’s AI Act compels businesses to understand where AI makes decisions, shifting focus from technology implementation to risk management.

AI Implementation Without Governance

Artificial intelligence has entered companies faster than governance structures. It typically starts innocently: someone in marketing uses a chat for drafting content, someone in sales launches a bot, and someone in IT tests a tool for code automation. At this initial stage, legal problems rarely emerge.

The Emergence of Decision Chaos

Instead, something more dangerous appears: decision-making chaos characterized by a lack of rules, ownership, and awareness of where and for what purposes AI is being utilized within the organization.

The AI Act’s Core Focus

The key insight from the EU’s AI Act is that it doesn’t ask whether companies are using AI, but rather whether they understand where AI makes decisions on their behalf. This regulation centers on risk and responsibility, not the technology itself.

Previous Article

Patient's Will vs. Medical Assessment: ECHR Rules on Advance Directives

Next Article

Nuremberg Film Highlights Justice System Integrity