Brussels calls in the scientists to watch over AI: what the new European panel changes
The European Commission appointed a scientific panel and advisory forum to help apply the Artificial Intelligence Act.
Passing a law is one thing; making it work in practice is quite another — especially when the law tries to tame a technology that changes its face every six months. That’s exactly the challenge of the European Union’s Artificial Intelligence Act, and Brussels has just reinforced the team to face it.
The European Commission has appointed a scientific panel of independent experts and an advisory forum to advise the Commission’s AI Office and national authorities. In other words: people who genuinely understand AI helping to apply the rules without killing innovation in the process.
Why this matters to Portugal
The European AI Act applies to all member states, and Portugal is no exception. Companies that use or build AI here will have to follow the same rulebook as their German or French peers — which can be either a brake or an advantage, if the rules give investors confidence.
Having scientists guide enforcement matters for a simple reason: AI evolves too fast for an inattentive regulator. Models that were fiction a year ago are routine today. A technical panel allows the interpretation of the rules to be adjusted to reality, rather than frozen in a text that ages.
The difficult balance
Europe is playing a delicate game here: protecting citizens from abuses (surveillance, algorithmic discrimination, manipulation) without falling behind in the tech race against the United States and China. Too tight a rein scares companies off; too loose and you lose trust.
This panel is the attempt to keep both hands on the wheel. We’ll see if it’s enough.
Illustrative · Photo: Daniil Komov / Pexels