The Greyguard Blog
Practical perspectives on AI data governance, AI readiness, and the risks leaders need to manage before deploying AI at scale.
The One EU AI Act Requirement Nobody Is Talking About.
Article 26 requires a named human accountable for every high-risk AI system. Most organisations do not have one.
Most organisations preparing for the EU AI Act are focused on risk registers, technical documentation, and data governance. But Article 26 requires something almost nobody is talking about, a named individual accountable for every high-risk AI system. Here is why it matters, and what regulators will actually check.
Your AI Agent Just Joined Your Company. Did Anyone Run a Background Check?
Think about what you do when you hire a new employee.
AI agents are not just tools. They are actors with identities, permissions, and access to your most sensitive data. Most organisations never ran the onboarding process. Here's what that means, and what the EU AI Act requires you to do about it.
Your AI Is Live. Your Governance Isn't. The Law Has Noticed.
Your AI Is Only as Safe as the Data Behind It
Most EU AI Act conversations focus on deadlines and fines. But the organisations that will actually be ready when regulators come knocking understand two articles that sit at the operational heart of the law, Article 9 and Article 10.
When the Pope and an AI Founder Sit Down Together, Something Has Shifted.
When the people building the thing are also the ones worried about it, maybe the rest of us should start paying attention too.
The Pope met with Chris Olah, co-founder of Anthropic, in the Vatican. It is not just activists and academics raising the alarm about AI anymore. It is the founders of the AI companies themselves.