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Why this matters: The EU ban makes it illegal to build or sell a nudification tool. India’s IT Amendment Rules 2026 place proactive obligations only on platforms and intermediaries. A standalone nudification app that does not operate as a social media intermediary faces no obligation under Indian law at all. India’s existing frameworks compound this gap:
The nudification ban: The ban was not in the European Commission’s original proposal. Parliament pushed it through. Companies have until December 2, 2026, to comply. The prohibition exempts systems with effective safety measures already preventing misuse.
Michael McNamara, an Irish MEP and co-rapporteur for the civil liberties committee, said: “Non-consensual intimate imagery is a systemic harm being industrialised by AI and in which the overwhelming majority of victims are women and girls.”
Co-rapporteur Arba Kokalari, a Swedish MEP from the European People’s Party (EPP) and rapporteur for the Internal Market committee, said: “We wanted to have clarity on what we think about nudification apps in Europe and that we are not accepting of it.”
What triggered it: Lawmakers pushed for the ban after the late-2025 Grok scandal, in which users generated sexual deepfakes of women and children on X using Elon Musk’s AI chatbot Grok, making it a red line in the trilogue. In India, MeitY issued a notice to X in January 2026 over the same content, finding X’s response inadequate. This directly preceded India’s IT Amendment Rules 2026, India’s first framework explicitly covering AI-generated content.
Delayed timelines for high-risk AI: High-risk obligations covering biometrics, education, employment, law enforcement, justice, and border management now apply from December 2, 2027. AI in regulated products such as lifts and toys takes effect August 2, 2028. Both were previously set for August 2, 2026, giving companies roughly 16 extra months. Brussels says the delay reflects unfinished standards work, with harmonised standards from the European Committee for Standardisation (CEN) and the European Committee for Electrotechnical Standardisation (CENELEC) stated as preconditions.
Other changes:
Criticism: The Center for Democracy and Technology (CDT) Europe joined 32 other civil society organisations in an open letter flagging weakened protections around biometric identification, AI in schools, and medical AI. More than 40 organisations signed a separate letter to Parliament in mid-April, making the same case. The Jacques Delors Centre, a Berlin-based think tank, argued that deregulation would not primarily benefit European businesses given Big Tech’s dominance. Legal analysts note the deal does not reduce complexity but redistributes it, calling “simplification” a political label.
What comes next? Formal endorsement by Parliament’s plenary and Council ministers is expected before the summer recess. The target is adoption before August 2, 2026, when current high-risk rules would otherwise apply.
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