Compliance Cards: Automated EU AI Act Compliance Analyses amidst a Complex AI Supply Chain
Bill Marino, Yaqub Chaudhary, Yulu Pi, Rui-Jie Yew and, Preslav Aleksandrov, Carwyn Rahman, William F. Shen, Isaac Robinson, and Nicholas D. Lane

TL;DR
This paper presents an automated system to streamline EU AI Act compliance assessments for complex AI supply chains, enabling real-time predictions and reducing compliance burdens for providers.
Contribution
The paper introduces a comprehensive system with multi-stakeholder transparency artifacts and an algorithm for real-time compliance prediction of AI systems under the EU AI Act.
Findings
System automates compliance analysis process
Enables real-time compliance predictions
Facilitates democratization of compliance assessments
Abstract
As the AI supply chain grows more complex, AI systems and models are increasingly likely to incorporate multiple internally- or externally-sourced components such as datasets and (pre-trained) models. In such cases, determining whether or not the aggregate AI system or model complies with the EU AI Act (AIA) requires a multi-step process in which compliance-related information about both the AI system or model and all its component parts is: (1) gathered, potentially from multiple arms-length sources; (2) harmonized, if necessary; (3) inputted into an analysis that looks across all of it to render a compliance prediction. Because this process is so complex and time-consuming, it threatens to overburden the limited compliance resources of the AI providers (i.e., developers) who bear much of the responsibility for complying with the AIA. It also renders rapid or real-time compliance…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEthics and Social Impacts of AI · Artificial Intelligence in Law · Law, Economics, and Judicial Systems
MethodsSparse Evolutionary Training
