Stakeholder: European Commission (unknown)
The source text clearly and repeatedly identifies the European Commission as a key stakeholder in the AI Act policy. The Commission is presented as the primary actor developing, implementing, and supporting compliance with the AI Act through various initiatives and guidance documents. The record's identification of the European Commission as a stakeholder is directly confirmed by the source material. The '(unknown)' designation in the record appears to refer to an unknown role or relationship type, which is not contradicted by the source—the source simply does not specify what particular role designation should be assigned.
Our claim
entire record- Policy
- EU AI Act
- Stakeholder
- European Commission
- Position
- support
- Importance
- high
- Reason
- Proposed the original regulation in April 2021; leads implementation through the European AI Office; positioned the Act as a global standard-setter for AI governance
- Context
- Commissioner Thierry Breton led the regulatory agenda; Ursula von der Leyen included AI regulation in 2019 political guidelines,European AI Office established within the Commission to oversee GPAI enforcement,Can impose fines up to 3% of worldwide annual turnover for GPAI violations
Source evidence
1 src · 1 checkNoteThe source text clearly and repeatedly identifies the European Commission as a key stakeholder in the AI Act policy. The Commission is presented as the primary actor developing, implementing, and supporting compliance with the AI Act through various initiatives and guidance documents. The record's identification of the European Commission as a stakeholder is directly confirmed by the source material. The '(unknown)' designation in the record appears to refer to an unknown role or relationship type, which is not contradicted by the source—the source simply does not specify what particular role designation should be assigned.