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IT lobbyists exploit EU AI Act uncertainty as deadline looms

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Jun 30, 20253 mins
Artificial IntelligenceComplianceRegulation

Dominated by the likes of Apple, Google, and Meta, the CCIA has called to ‘stop the clock’ on the EU AI Act’s Aug. 2 implementation, with some EU leaders having already signaled openness to delaying the regulations.

AI Act, Europa, 16:9
Credit: Ivan Marc - shutterstock.com

The powerful IT lobby group Computer & Communications Industry Association (CCIA) is . At a meeting of European heads of state and government in Brussels last week, lobbyists for the association, dominated by US corporations, called for the EU AI ​​Act’s implementation to be postponed. The CCIA’s reasoning was that key provisions of the regulatory framework — including the crucial rules for general-purpose AI (GPAI) models — that are scheduled to come into force on Aug. 2 are still inadequate.

CCIA representatives expressed concerns that the European Commission is at risk of missing the law’s implementation deadlines. A hasty introduction of the law could jeopardize Europe’s AI ambitions, including the €3.4 trillion projected by the European Commission that AI deployment will bring to the EU economy by 2030.

Is Europe putting the brakes on AI?

“Europe cannot move forward with one foot on the brake on AI,” said Daniel Friedlaender, SVP and head of office of the CCIA in Europe. “With key parts of the AI ​​law still missing just weeks before the regulations come into force, we need a pause to get the law in order or risk stalling innovation altogether.”

Indeed, there still appears to be considerable uncertainty surrounding AI regulation in Europe. Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson recently called the rules confusing, . And according to a survey from US cloud provider AWS, two-thirds of European companies still do not understand the extent to which they are responsible for the use of AI in their organizations under the AI ​​Act.

Karsten Wildberger, Germany’s new Digital Minister, also appears open to considering an extension of the implementation deadline for the AI ​​Act. In the absence of guidelines, norms, and technical standards, companies would need more time to prepare, the minister said at a meeting of European communications and digital ministers in Luxembourg in early June.

Digitalminister Karsten Wildberger, CDU
Germany’s new Digital Minister Karsten Wildberg no longer rules out delays in the introduction of the next AI Act stages.

Juergen Nowak – shutterstock.com

Other countries are going even further. Wildberger’s colleague from Denmark, Caroline Stage Olson, has even called for a reform of all rules governing the digital space in Europe, including the .

IT lobby warns of immense risks of implementing the AI ​​law

The discussions are likely to be grist to the mill for the IT lobby. The CCIA said it joins the calls of various national governments and members of the European Parliament. The lobby group called on EU heads of state and government to “recognize the immense risks of implementing the AI ​​law without a final framework.”

EU heads of state and government must act now and instruct the Commission to adjust its unrealistic timetable to ensure the smooth and effective implementation of the AI ​​law, CCAI representatives said. “A bold ‘stop-the-clock’ intervention is urgently needed to provide legal certainty to AI developers and implementers while the necessary standards are unavailable or delayed.”