From ambiguity to a reviewable plan

Three steps turn the EU AI Act from a looming deadline into something you can actually act on — and keep acting on as the rules move.

The three steps

  1. 01

    Assess

    Answer a short, plain-English wizard about your product. Statuvox classifies its EU AI Act risk tier and the obligations that actually apply — with the reasoning shown.

  2. 02

    Draft

    Get the document set your classification requires — risk records, transparency notices, an AI policy, a task checklist — drafted for review. Every draft carries its disclaimer.

  3. 03

    Stay current

    We monitor the regulators. When a change affects one of your products, you get an alert that says what changed and what to do — with an updated draft ready to review.

An assessment that explains itself

The wizard asks about how your product uses AI, who it affects, and where it operates. Statuvox maps your answers to the EU AI Act's risk tiers and obligation groups — prohibited, high-risk Annex III, general-purpose AI, and Article 50 transparency — and shows the reasoning behind every result, so you can challenge it with your advisers.

Documents drafted for review, never auto-published

Each obligation pulls in the documents it requires: risk records, transparency notices, an AI policy, an audit-log template, a task checklist. Statuvox drafts them with your product's specifics, versions them, and marks every one as a draft with its disclaimer. Nothing is treated as final until you and your legal team say so.

Monitoring that tells you what changed and what to do

The EU AI Act is rolling out in stages, with national guidance still arriving. Statuvox watches official sources and data-protection authorities, analyses each change against your specific products, and only flags what genuinely affects you — with an updated draft ready and an audit trail of every decision.

Ready to see your obligations?

Run the assessment and get a reviewed compliance draft to take to your team.