Meeting the EU AI Act’s
transparency requirements 

Get a clear overview of the regulation, explore the key transparency requirements, and see how trust services can help you put them into practice.

Deepfakes, opaque "black box" decision-making, and AI-enabled social engineering have already eroded public confidence in digital content and communications. The EU AI Act responds directly to this: if content is created or modified by AI, the people encountering it have a right to know. This is crucial for any organization that develops, deploys, or distributes AI-generated content in the EU.

A legal requirement with a fixed date attached.

The EU AI Act's main obligations and enforcement take effect on 2 August 2026, and transparency isn't the exception, with a grace period.

Non-compliance carries real financial exposure: fines for prohibited AI violations can reach €35 million or 7% of global annual turnover.

We created this whitepaper to help AI providers, compliance officers, and product teams understand what Article 50 and the Code of Practice require in practice. 

What You'll Find Inside

  • Breakdown of risk categories and what determines your compliance burden.

  • Walkthrough of what disclosure, labeling, and notification actually require from providers and deployers.

  • How the EU's newly proposed labeling methods apply to your content types.

  • What "tamper-evident and time-stamped" means for your infrastructure.

  • How trust services close the gap between the regulation's text and a working, auditable implementation.

Organizations that put verifiable, signed marking processes in place now will be ready regardless of how the final standards land. 

Download this white paper now to understand what you need to do before the EU AI Act takes effect.