As artificial intelligence adoption accelerates, governments and regulatory bodies are introducing new rules to protect individuals, organizations, and sensitive data. While many companies view compliance as a barrier, business leaders increasingly argue that governance can actually guide AI innovation and reduce long-term risks.
The global regulatory landscape is expanding quickly. The European Union’s AI Act is one of the most prominent frameworks, but research from global law firm Bird & Bird shows that at least 22 jurisdictions are developing their own AI regulations. For digital leaders, the challenge is learning how to innovate while complying with these emerging requirements.
First, organizations can encourage innovation within clear boundaries. For example, Art Hu recommends using AI sandboxes and approved technology lists to enable experimentation while limiting risk. At the same time, collaboration with regulators remains essential. According to Paul Neville at The Pensions Regulator, working closely with policymakers helps ensure new legislation supports innovation rather than restricts it.
Another strategy involves using AI to support compliance itself. Royal Mail’s cyber portfolio and architecture director Martin Hardy notes that AI can automate large portions of security analysis and threat modeling, allowing security professionals to focus on specialized risks and complex threat scenarios. Strong internal relationships are equally important. Ian Ruffle, head of data and insight at RAC, argues that governance depends on organizational culture. Building trust between data teams, security professionals, and leadership ensures that AI systems are implemented responsibly while still enabling innovation.
Finally, leaders must ask detailed questions about data governance. Erik Mayer of Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust emphasizes that data cleaning and transformation must be carefully documented to avoid bias and ensure regulatory approval.
Together, these approaches show that governance does not have to limit AI innovation, it can provide the structure needed for responsible and sustainable deployment.
Quelle:
https://www.zdnet.com/article/5-ways-to-use-governance-challenge-regulation-ai-innovation/

