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Source standards

How the newsroom keeps EU regulatory briefings clear and source-led.

RegulationsOffice starts from official EU and agency sources, then turns relevant updates into business-readable briefings with checklists and clear limits.

Latest review

  • source review: 12 May 2026
  • public notes: 6
  • latest update: 12 May 2026
12 May 2026Latest source review

Recent public notes are checked against official EU or agency pages before publication.

6Regulatory briefings

Short explainers with a source link, practical impact, and checklist starter.

6Policy areas

AI, data, cyber, accessibility, finance, suppliers, and product evidence readiness.

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Public readership signals stay first-party and do not create subscriber lists.

Editorial standard

Official sources first

Briefings link to EU institutions, EU agencies, or official policy pages before secondary commentary is used.

Practical language

Each note explains what changed, who may need to pay attention, and the smallest safe first question.

Clear limits

No legal advice, certification, representation, invented identity details, or sensitive-file intake through public pages.

Reader privacy

Useful public readership signals, without advertising tracking.

RegulationsOffice can see which public notes and request links are useful while avoiding third-party analytics, advertising cookies, and automatic subscriber creation.

Useful for readers

Popular topics can be updated sooner and linked to better checklists.

Clear limits

Public forms remain manual and non-sensitive. No named prospect list is created from reading a page.

EU-style transparency

Source links, dates, and limits are visible so readers can check the basis before acting.

Current official-source notes

Use this list to open the source behind each briefing.

AI Act · Prepare

European Commission AI Act policy page

The 12 May 2026 official source check confirmed the Commission frames the AI Act around risk levels, prohibited-practice rules already active from 2025, and stricter obligations for high-risk systems.

Reviewed 12 May 2026.

Open official source
European Accessibility Act · Prepare

European Commission EAA policy page

The 12 May 2026 official source check confirmed the EAA page lists covered products and services such as computers, smartphones, banking, e-books, e-commerce, and passenger transport service elements.

Reviewed 12 May 2026.

Open official source
NIS2 · Prepare

European Commission NIS2 implementing-regulation material

The 12 May 2026 official source check confirmed the implementing-regulation material focuses on DNS, TLD, cloud, data centre, CDN, managed service, marketplace/search/social platform, and trust-service classes.

Reviewed 12 May 2026.

Open official source
DORA · Monitor

ESMA DORA information page

The 12 May 2026 official source check confirmed ESMA describes DORA as applying from 17 January 2025 and covering ICT risk management, third-party risk, testing, incidents, information sharing, and oversight of critical providers.

Reviewed 12 May 2026.

Open official source
Cyber Resilience Act · Monitor

European Commission Cyber Resilience Act page

The 12 May 2026 official source check confirmed the CRA entered into force on 10 December 2024, with reporting obligations from 11 September 2026 and main obligations from 11 December 2027.

Reviewed 12 May 2026.

Open official source
Data Act · Monitor

European Commission Data Act policy page

The 12 May 2026 official source check confirmed the Data Act entered into force on 11 January 2024 and into application on 12 September 2025, with emphasis on connected-device data, user access, cloud switching, and unfair-contract terms.

Reviewed 12 May 2026.

Open official source

Reader safety limits

  • No legal advice or compliance certification.
  • No named-target or prospect lists.
  • No newsletter send or subscriber creation from the public form.
  • No sensitive evidence through public forms.
  • No invented legal identity, address, VAT/tax, register, or phone details.