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Europe Sets the Rules, India Writes the Code: How Brussels’ AI Law Is Reshaping India’s Tech Industry


Updated: May 10, 2025 08:15

Image Source: Hindustan Times

A sweeping new Brussels law is rewriting the playbook for India's enormous IT industry behind the scenes. The European Union's Artificial Intelligence Act, already partially implemented and extending further next month, is now the international gold standard for AI regulation. For India, the world software powerhouse, it means a root-and-branch change in the way code is written, tested, and released for European customers.

The EU AI Act divides AI systems into categories according to their risk and imposes stringent requirements for transparency, fairness, and accountability. High-risk applications-such as software used by banks to approve loans or screen potential hires-must now be explainable and fixable. For Indian IT giants such as Infosys, Wipro, and TCS, whose code drives a large part of Europe's digital foundation, this is a revolution.

Indian IT companies, long famous for speed and scale, are now scrambling to catch up. Infosys has established in-house AI ethics boards. Wipro is creating tools to explain AI decisions. TCS is educating its developers to navigate the EU's complicated legal jargon. But many smaller firms are behind-some not even realizing they're now under European law.

This regulatory change is not just a headache for compliance. India's tech industry has run on cost, quality, and speed for years. Now, trust and transparency are the new currency. The systems need not only to work-they need to be explainable and accountable.

But here's the silver lining. If Indian businesses can live up to these greater expectations, they won't only retain their European customers-they'll establish the global standard for reliable AI. The world is observing India, with its enormous reservoir of young programmers, learning to navigate a new world where European regulation defines the global digital order and Indian hands pen the code that makes it tick.

Key Highlights

The EU AI Act is now in force, setting strict rules for AI systems entering the European market.

Indian IT companies must make their AI systems transparent, explainable, and correctable to comply.

Major firms like Infosys, Wipro, and TCS are already adapting, but many smaller players are behind.

The shift marks a move from speed and scale to trust and accountability in India’s tech sector.

Conforming to EU norms would make Indian companies leaders in global AI trust and safety.

Sources: Hindustan Times, European Commission, Observer Research Foundation

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