Japan Introduces Disclosure Requirements for Generative Artificial Intelligence Companies

Japan enacts new rules mandating transparency from generative Artificial Intelligence companies, impacting compliance across the tech sector.

Japan has implemented new legislation establishing disclosure requirements for companies developing generative Artificial Intelligence. The statute, highlighted in Jenner & Block LLP´s April 2025 Japan Newsletter, aims to ensure greater transparency about how generative Artificial Intelligence platforms operate and manage data.

The new rules are designed to address growing regulatory and ethical considerations associated with generative Artificial Intelligence technologies. Companies subject to the law must provide clear information on their models, sources of training data, and potential risks, a move viewed as a significant step toward accountability and user protection in emerging digital markets.

This development aligns Japan with other jurisdictions imposing oversight on Artificial Intelligence systems, reflecting international momentum toward trustworthy and responsible technology deployment. Legal and technology professionals are closely monitoring these changes, recognizing their implications for compliance, innovation, and cross-border business activity in the broader Artificial Intelligence ecosystem.

68

Impact Score

Policymakers weigh pause on Artificial Intelligence data center construction

Federal, state, and local officials are moving to slow or condition large data center development as concerns grow over electricity costs, grid strain, environmental effects, and labor standards. Proposed moratoriums and tax incentive changes are creating new uncertainty for developers, hyperscalers, and financiers.

European Union delays key Artificial Intelligence Act obligations

European Union lawmakers have agreed to revise the Artificial Intelligence Act, delaying major high-risk compliance obligations and easing some overlapping requirements. The changes give businesses more time to prepare while preserving the law’s core framework for high-risk systems and transparency rules.

HMRC signs £175m Quantexa deal for fraud detection

HM Revenue and Customs has signed a £175 million, 10-year agreement with Quantexa to unify fragmented data and strengthen fraud detection. The deployment is designed to automate routine work while keeping decisions transparent, auditable and subject to human approval.

Us supercomputers test new Artificial Intelligence chip suppliers

Sandia National Laboratories is evaluating chips from Israeli startup NextSilicon as major chipmakers shift their roadmaps toward Artificial Intelligence. The move reflects growing concern that mainstream processors are deprioritizing the scientific computing features government labs still need.

Contact Us

Got questions? Use the form to contact us.

Contact Form

Clicking next sends a verification code to your email. After verifying, you can enter your message.