The EU AI Act is in force.
Does your organisation know what it requires of you?
This free 45-minute session with Kibo AI expert Markus Schaumberger cuts through the legal complexity. Walk away knowing what the regulation actually requires, where your AI use cases stand, and what practical action looks like. No legal background needed.

Every other Thursday at 16:00 CET

45 minutes live

Microsoft Teams

Held in German, for the D/A/CH region

100% Free
No cost, no catch

45 Minutes
Focused, no filler

Every Other Thursday
Register once, join any session

Live Q&A
Ask your specific questions
Most organisations using AI today cannot answer three basic questions
The EU AI Act applies a risk-based approach. What’s prohibited, what’s high-risk, and what’s simply a transparency requirement: these distinctions exist. Most organisations just haven’t mapped their AI use cases to them yet.
What is actually prohibited?
The EU AI Act bans specific AI practices outright. Most organisations assume the tools they use are fine, but the prohibited categories are concrete and sometimes surprising. Few have assessed whether any of their use cases cross the line.
Which of our tools are high-risk?
High-risk AI has a precise legal definition: HR and recruitment tools, credit decisions, safety-critical applications. The category is clear once explained, but most organisations have never mapped their AI use cases to it.
What are deployers required to do?
The EU AI Act doesn't just apply to AI builders. It applies to organisations that use AI. As a deployer, you have real obligations around oversight, transparency, and documentation, even for tools built entirely by third parties.
- Most organisations using AI today cannot clearly say which of their systems fall under the EU AI Act, or what they are actually required to do about it. This session answers that.
45 minutes that give you genuine clarity
- What the EU AI Act actually says: the risk-tier structure, who it applies to as a deployer, and how prohibited, high-risk, and transparency categories differ in practice.
- Which of your AI use cases are likely affected: GenAI copilots, HR tools, chatbots, customer service AI, decision support, content generation and which categories apply to each.
- What deployer obligations mean in practice: oversight roles, transparency disclosures, documentation requirements, and what human oversight actually looks like operationally.
- Where the grey areas are. Many cases are not black and white. Markus walks through a proportionate approach that supports responsible AI adoption without blocking innovation.
- The questions your leadership team needs to answer: a practical framework for the conversations your legal, HR, IT, and operations teams should be having right now.
Markus Schaumberger
Managing Director D/A/CH, Kibo AI

EU AI Act specialist, advising deployer organisations on governance strategy and practical compliance

Led AI governance engagements across financial services, insurance, healthcare, and manufacturing

Plain-language approach: no legal jargon, no unnecessary complexity, no panic
45 minutes, three phases
0:00 – 0:15
What the EU AI Act actually says
A factual, jargon-free overview of the regulation: the risk-tier structure, who it applies to, and what distinguishes prohibited, high-risk, transparency, and minimal-risk AI in practice.
- Risk categories explained clearly
- Deployers vs. providers: key distinction
- What's banned, what's restricted, what's open
0:15 – 0:35
How it applies to your organisation
- Use case walkthrough with real examples
- Proportionate, practical approach
- Governance without blocking innovation
0:35 – 0:45
Live Q&A
- Your specific use cases and sectors
- Procurement and vendor considerations
- Practical next steps for your organisation
Join us on
11 June 2026
Register once. Your spot is valid for this and any future session. You will receive a calendar invite and a short preparation note. No preparation is required on your part.
- A confirmed spot: your registration is valid for every upcoming session
- Microsoft Teams link and calendar invite sent immediately
- A brief preparation note the day before, covering the three questions the session answers
- No technical background required, built for decision-makers
- Next session: 11 June 2026 · 16:00 Uhr · Microsoft Teams
Reserve your free spot
- Next session: 11 June 2026 · Thursday, 16:00 Uhr · In German
Join us on
11 June 2026
Register once. Your spot is valid for this and any future session. You will receive a calendar invite and a short preparation note. No preparation is required on your part.
- A confirmed spot: your registration is valid for every upcoming session
- Microsoft Teams link and calendar invite sent immediately
- A brief preparation note the day before, covering the three questions the session answers
- No technical background required, built for decision-makers
- Next session: 11 June 2026 · 16:00 Uhr · Microsoft Teams
Reserve your free spot
- Next session: 11 June 2026 · Thursday, 16:00 Uhr · In German
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Frequently asked questions
Can I book as an individual employee?
Yes. Many participants book through their personal annual training budget, no company-wide decision needed. Some pay entirely out of pocket because they want to be the person their company turns to on AI questions and know that this skill directly shapes their career options over the next few years. Whether you are looking to move up, stay relevant, or simply get ahead of your colleagues: all modules are bookable for individuals. The Foundation course starts at 790 € per person for a single day, and you can add further modules whenever you are ready.
Is this a sales call?
What happens after I register?
You receive a confirmation email with the Microsoft Teams link and a calendar invite for the next session at 16:00 CET. A short preparation note arrives the day before, outlining the questions the session will answer. No preparation required, just show up.