"V-PROOF : The Trusted Infrastructure EU AI Act by the EU AI Act "
In less than two years, artificial intelligence has radically transformed corporate decision-making. But this revolution has brought with it an unprecedented challenge: regulatory risk. Faced with strict regulations such as the EU AI Act, the question echoing through boardrooms is clear: in the age of AI, how do you prove what is real, what is legal, and who created it?
Trust in the digital world can no longer rely on third parties or paper documents. Businesses need to prove their regulatory compliance instantly and with mathematical certainty. That is why we are announcing today the full rollout of V-Proof : the first Trust Layer Layer for the AI economy.
A new compliance standard designed to turn every corporate process and document into immutable evidence.
Digital Order and Law: The Hidden Risk of the EU AI Act Boards of Directors
On August 2, 2026, Article 50 of the EU AI Act an end to "blind trust." Probabilistic AI detection tools will no longer serve as a defense in an audit. Gil Blancafort analyzes this new legal risk for Executive Committees and explains why anchoring infrastructure (V-Proof ) may be the only way to mathematically certify the human origin of corporate assets.
The Crisis of Homogeneity
If you use the same AI models as your competitors, your brand will be invisible. By 2026, efficiency will be a commodity; differentiation will be the new luxury. Gil Blancafort analyzes the risk of "Model Collapse" and proposes Strategic Provenance as the only viable strategy for protecting the value of your intellectual property
From Hype to Governance: The Corporate Journey from AI to IC... and Now, to IR (Responsible Intelligence)
By 2026, the speed of AI will no longer be a competitive advantage—it will be a commodity. Gil Blancafort examines the critical paradigm shift for corporations: the transition from Artificial Intelligence to Collective Intelligence (CI) and the new, unavoidable imperative of Responsible Intelligence (RI). Discover why the business question is no longer “what does your AI do,” but “who is accountable for it.”
