"AI tools are already in your organisation. This training ensures they are being used within the law."
The EU AI Act, GDPR, and emerging data regulations are reshaping what organisations can and cannot do with artificial intelligence. Many teams are already using AI tools for drafting, analysis, decision support and automation without a clear framework for what data can go in, what output can be trusted, and what obligations the organisation has as a result.
MARVENQ AI legal training closes that gap. We deliver practical, expert-led sessions that translate the regulatory landscape into decisions and guardrails your teams can apply from day one. Whether you are assessing your obligations under the EU AI Act, mapping how GDPR applies to your AI use cases, or building governance frameworks for responsible AI deployment, our training gives your organisation the legal clarity it needs to move forward with confidence.
The EU AI Act what it means for your organisation
The EU AI Act introduces a risk-based framework classifying AI systems from unacceptable risk (prohibited) to high risk (strict requirements) to low risk (transparency obligations only). We explain how to determine where your AI systems fall in this framework, what requirements apply, and what documentation and controls you need in place. This includes specific guidance on General Purpose AI (GPAI) models and what the systemic risk tier means for organisations using large language models.
GDPR and AI where the obligations overlap
Using AI tools to process personal data triggers GDPR obligations that many organisations have not fully mapped. We cover what constitutes automated decision-making and profiling under the GDPR, when a Data Protection Impact Assessment (DPIA) is required for AI use cases, and how Privacy by Design applies to AI systems. We also address the obligations around training AI models on personal data and the guardrails required for AI-generated output that involves individuals.
What should never enter an AI tool
One of the most immediate practical concerns for any organisation using AI is data input risk. Employees who enter sensitive personal data, confidential business information or legally protected material into external AI tools may be triggering GDPR violations, breaching confidentiality obligations or creating intellectual property exposure often without realising it. We deliver clear, memorable guidance on what constitutes safe and unsafe AI input, and how to enforce that guidance across teams.
AI output accuracy, IP and liability
AI-generated content carries risks that are easy to overlook: hallucinated facts presented as accurate, copyright-infringing output, and decisions made on the basis of AI analysis that turns out to be wrong. We train your teams to evaluate AI output critically, understand when it can be relied upon, and document the human oversight that regulators increasingly expect to see.
Building an AI governance framework
Beyond individual compliance requirements, organisations need a coherent approach to AI governance covering tool approval, data classification, acceptable use policies and accountability for AI-related decisions. We help your teams and leadership understand what a defensible AI governance framework looks like, and how to build one that scales without slowing the organisation down.
MARVENQ AI legal training is built for legal, compliance and risk teams who need to understand their obligations under the EU AI Act and GDPR, operational teams already using AI tools in their daily work, product and engineering teams building or integrating AI-powered systems, and leadership teams responsible for AI governance and organisational risk.
AI regulation is moving faster than most organisations' ability to track it. The EU AI Act is now in force. GDPR enforcement around AI use is increasing. Organisations that wait until they receive an inquiry or a fine before building their compliance framework will find it significantly harder and more expensive to retrofit. MARVENQ provides training that reflects where the law actually is not where it was twelve months ago delivered by specialists who
The EU AI Act applies to any organisation that places AI systems on the EU market or uses them within the EU including organisations based outside the EU. The scope is broad. If your organisation uses, develops or deploys AI systems that interact with EU-based individuals, you are likely within scope.
The EU AI Act entered into force in August 2024 and is being phased in. Prohibitions on unacceptable-risk AI applied from February 2025. Requirements for high-risk AI systems and GPAI models are phasing in through 2025 and 2026. Organisations need to begin their compliance work now.
Yes. Organisations using off-the-shelf tools are still responsible for how those tools are deployed, what data enters them, how output is used, and whether the tool is being applied in a high-risk context. The user organisation carries real regulatory obligations even when the AI system itself is developed by a third party.
MARVENQ AI legal training is designed to complement rather than duplicate GDPR training. We focus on the AI-specific obligations and the intersections between the EU AI Act, GDPR and other applicable regulations, rather than covering GDPR in full. Many organisations combine AI legal training with our GDPR and data regulations programme for a complete picture.