AI Privacy Law Mapper — Free Interactive Guide

PrivOpticFree Resource
AI Governance

Which AI laws apply to you?

The AI rulebook is a moving target — the EU AI Act, California's ADMT regulations, Colorado, Texas, Utah, Illinois and more all land on different dates and hinge on how you use AI, not just where you are. Answer a few questions to map the frameworks worth reviewing, then use the practical guidance below.

Last reviewed: July 2026 · general information, not legal advice
01

AI-law mapper

Nothing you enter leaves your browser. This surfaces frameworks likely in scope — always confirm the detail against the primary source or counsel.

Where do you operate or serve users?
Select all that apply. AI laws often reach you based on who you serve, not where you're based.
What's your role with the AI?
How is the AI used?
Toggle everything that's true.

Your results will appear here.

02

Key dates, 2025–2028

The compliance calendar most teams are planning against right now.

03

Practical guidance

The legal hooks and everyday guardrails that matter most — switch between industry and AI usage pattern.

Turn the map into a programme

PrivOptic builds the assessments, registers and workflows behind all of this — AI/ADMT impact assessments, vendor risk, RoPA and more.

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Not legal advice. This resource is general information about a fast-changing area of law, last reviewed July 2026. Effective dates and obligations shift — notably, the EU's Digital Omnibus (approved by the European Parliament in June 2026) defers several high-risk AI Act deadlines, but until it is published in the Official Journal the original dates remain the binding law. Colorado's AI Act was repealed and replaced by SB 189 (effective January 2027). Always confirm the current position against the primary source, a qualified attorney, or your DPO before acting. Applicability also depends on entity-level thresholds, exemptions and definitions that this tool does not evaluate.