The Global Legal Post launches international comparative law guide to Artificial Intelligence

Second edition, edited by Osborne Clarke’s John Buyers, provides detailed commentary on EU’s Artificial Intelligence Act
Headshot of John Buyers

John Buyers

The Global Legal Post today launches the second online edition of the Law Over Borders comparative guide to Artificial Intelligence. 

Edited by John Buyers, head of AI and machine learning at Osborne Clarke, the guide features contributions from an array of leading firms in key jurisdictions across the world, providing answers and insight on how to integrate AI into business operations.

The guide also provides pragmatic and clear guidance on emergent AI laws in the European Union, China and Canada as well as insight into how national AI laws and regulations are likely to develop in the future. 

Notably, the second edition contains detailed commentary on the EU’s far-reaching Artificial Intelligence Act (EU AIA), which came into force on 1 August, and a new chapter covering China’s regulation of AI, contributed by Global Law Office.

“In this edition of the guide we give concrete guidance on the provisions of the EU Artificial Intelligence Act – vital if you are intending to use, deploy or sell AI in the European Union, as well as key developments in the AI laws of China,” said Buyers.

The online guide’s easy-to-use digital format allows readers to quickly assess how different jurisdictions tackle common issues by comparing contributing authors’ answers to a series of carefully framed questions.  

The print edition, meanwhile, will be officially launched by Buyers at Luxury Law Summit New York, which is hosted by The Global Legal Post, on 19 November. Click here to read the online guide and here to pre-order the print edition.

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