AICYLGMar 27

Transparency as Architecture: Structural Compliance Gaps in EU AI Act Article 50 II

arXiv:2603.2698317.9h-index: 7
AI Analysis

For AI developers and regulators, this paper highlights fundamental incompatibilities between current AI architectures and legal transparency requirements, urging architectural redesign.

The paper identifies structural gaps in EU AI Act Article 50 II compliance for generative AI, showing that dual transparency mandates (human-readable and machine-readable labeling) are infeasible in synthetic data generation and automated fact-checking due to technical constraints like watermark fragility and non-deterministic outputs.

Art. 50 II of the EU Artificial Intelligence Act mandates dual transparency for AI-generated content: outputs must be labeled in both human-understandable and machine-readable form for automated verification. This requirement, entering into force in August 2026, collides with fundamental constraints of current generative AI systems. Using synthetic data generation and automated fact-checking as diagnostic use cases, we show that compliance cannot be reduced to post-hoc labeling. In fact-checking pipelines, provenance tracking is not feasible under iterative editorial workflows and non-deterministic LLM outputs; moreover, the assistive-function exemption does not apply, as such systems actively assign truth values rather than supporting editorial presentation. In synthetic data generation, persistent dual-mode marking is paradoxical: watermarks surviving human inspection risk being learned as spurious features during training, while marks suited for machine verification are fragile under standard data processing. Across both domains, three structural gaps obstruct compliance: (a) absent cross-platform marking formats for interleaved human-AI outputs; (b) misalignment between the regulation's 'reliability' criterion and probabilistic model behavior; and (c) missing guidance for adapting disclosures to heterogeneous user expertise. Closing these gaps requires transparency to be treated as an architectural design requirement, demanding interdisciplinary research across legal semantics, AI engineering, and human-centered desi

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