60 izinyanga zokudla kwekhiweko kwe-Act ya AI ya EU
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Chapter V — General-Purpose AI

EU AI Act GPAI Obligations: Chapter V Guide

Chapter V of the EU AI Act regulates general-purpose AI (GPAI) — what most people call foundation models. There are two tiers: standard GPAI obligations under Article 53, and additional obligations for models with systemic risk under Article 55.

Ungcono lwakhe: April 29, 2026

What Counts as GPAI?

The EU AI Act defines general-purpose AI models broadly:

An AI model that displays significant generality and is capable of competently performing a wide range of distinct tasks, regardless of how it is placed on the market. Most large language models, image-generation models, and multimodal foundation models qualify.

Article 53: Standard GPAI Provider Obligations

All GPAI providers must satisfy these baseline requirements:

  • Maintain technical documentation including training and testing process
  • Provide information to downstream providers integrating the model
  • Comply with EU copyright law, including a policy to respect text-and-data-mining opt-outs
  • Publish a sufficiently detailed summary of training data
  • Designate an EU representative if established outside the EU

Article 55: Systemic-Risk GPAI Obligations

Models meeting the systemic-risk threshold (currently 10²⁵ FLOPs of training compute, indicative) face additional duties:

  • Model evaluations including adversarial testing
  • Systemic-risk assessment and mitigation
  • Cybersecurity protections
  • Serious-incident reporting to the AI Office
  • Energy-consumption disclosure

Code of Practice

The Commission has facilitated a voluntary code of practice for GPAI providers:

Adoption is voluntary but provides a presumption of conformity for the obligations it covers.

Open-Source Carve-Out

Open-source GPAI models receive favorable treatment under the regulation:

GPAI models released under free and open-source licenses are largely exempted from Article 53, except for the copyright and training-data-summary obligations — and the carve-out does not apply at all to systemic-risk-tier models.