I'm sure it's possible, but AI companies don't invest much money into complying with the law as it's not profitable.

A normal industry would've figured out how to deal with this problem before going public, but AI people don't seem to be all that interested.

I'm sure they'll all cry foul if one of them get hit with a fine and an order to figure out how to fix the mess they've created, but this is what you get when you don't ethics to computer scientists.

> A normal industry would've figured out how to deal with this problem before going public, but AI people don't seem to be all that interested.

China is already dominating AI, you are asking the few companies in the West to stop completely.

The regulation is anti-growth and anti-technology - the GDPR, DSA, Cybersecurity Act and AI Act (and future Chat Control / Online Safety Act equivalent) must be repealed if Europe is to have any hope of a future tech industry.