As artificial intelligence becomes embedded in the day-to-day operations of public and private organisations alike, the role of data protection professionals has never been more complex—or more critical. To help professionals meet this challenge, the European Data Protection Board (EDPB) has released a comprehensive new training module: Law and Compliance in AI Security and Data Protection.
This self-guided curriculum offers a deep dive into the legal, ethical and operational dimensions of managing AI in line with EU data protection laws, including the GDPR and the proposed AI Act. It’s an important step toward equipping privacy professionals with the knowledge they need to assess and guide the use of AI technologies responsibly.
The EDPB training is structured around the full life cycle of AI systems—from inception and design to deployment and ongoing monitoring. It’s divided into three thematic parts:
Throughout the training, there is a strong emphasis on the evolving nature of AI risks, the importance of transparency, and the need for multidisciplinary collaboration to ensure lawful and ethical AI deployment.
While the EDPB training offers invaluable insights, applying that knowledge at scale remains a significant hurdle for many organisations. Regulatory requirements are continuously updated, and AI technologies are being introduced at a rapid pace — often faster than most organisations’ governance structures can adapt.
This is where structured, repeatable frameworks become essential. Organisations need practical tools to:
A well-designed privacy management system can help operationalise the principles taught in the training—especially when dealing with fragmented data sources, legacy infrastructure, and limited internal resources.
The EDPB’s training underscores a key message: data protection is not a one-time task—it’s a lifecycle commitment. For AI systems, that means:
Organisations that embed these practices into their workflows are better positioned to respond to audits, regulatory changes, and internal accountability demands. They’re also more likely to spot unintended harms early—whether it’s algorithmic bias, data quality issues, or ineffective consent mechanisms.
Privacy professionals should see compliance not only as a regulatory requirement, but also as a foundation for trust, innovation, and resilience.
The EDPB training marks an important milestone in shaping AI-ready data protection practices. It gives privacy professionals the legal and conceptual grounding they need to assess AI systems thoughtfully and confidently.
To put that knowledge into practice, tools like PrivIQ is designed to help operationalise key compliance steps—like AI system inventories, risk assessments, and ongoing governance—without adding unnecessary complexity.
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