New Era in Global Artificial Intelligence Regulations: OECD, EU AI Act and Türkiye Bill
Today, when artificial intelligence technologies have the potential to create a transformation similar to the industrial revolution, regulatory frameworks for the safe and ethical use of this technology are rapidly taking shape. Three diffe
Today, when artificial intelligence technologies have the potential to create a transformation similar to the industrial revolution, regulatory frameworks for the safe and ethical use of this technology are rapidly taking shape. Three different regulatory logics from three continents — but a common goal: responsible AI. Three key texts stand out for both business and policy makers: OECD Due Diligence Guidance for Responsible AI — implementation guide EU AI Act — binding legal framework * Turkish
The Signal
Today, when artificial intelligence technologies have the potential to create a transformation similar to the industrial revolution, regulatory frameworks for the safe and ethical use of this technology are rapidly taking shape. Three different regulatory logics from three continents — but a common goal: responsible AI.
Why It Matters
OECD Due Diligence Guide for Responsible AI — implementation guide EU AI Act — binding legal framework * Turkey Artificial Intelligence Bill — national harmonization initiative
In this article, we discuss the obligations brought by these three texts, their relationships with each other and their practical effects on businesses.
The OECD’s guidance is more of a “road map” for multinational companies and actors in the AI value chain, rather than a legal obligation. Its purpose is to identify, prevent and reduce negative impacts that may arise throughout the life cycle of artificial intelligence.
The Move
Why is it important? This guide provides a practical basis on how to implement legal regulations. It facilitates the compliance process of companies with binding laws such as the EU AI Act with a “checklist” logic.
The EU AI Act, the world’s first comprehensive AI law, adopts a risk-based approach. It classifies AI systems according to the risk they pose and imposes increasing liabilities accordingly.
Social scoring systems Manipulative sub-threshold techniques Emotion recognition at work and school Real-time remote biometric identification (with exceptions)
Read the Full Analysis
For the full original analysis, read the Ghost version here: https://www.mesutaydin.link/kuresel-yapay-zeka-duzenlemelerinde-yeni-donem-oecd-ab-ai-act-ve-turkiye-kanun-teklifi/
This article is for strategic information only. It is not legal, investment, or tax advice.



