Regulating AI Agents

2026-03-24Computers and Society

Computers and Society
AI summary

The authors examine how the European Union's AI Act, created before AI agents became widespread, struggles to handle the unique challenges these agents bring. They highlight issues like unreliable performance, risks of misuse, and unequal access to benefits. By analyzing the Act’s rules and enforcement frameworks, the authors show it depends too much on industry self-regulation and has limited government support. They conclude that policymakers need to rethink regulations to better manage AI agents in the future.

AI agentsEuropean Union AI Actautonomous systemsregulationenforcementself-regulationgovernanceperformance failuremalicious useeconomic access
Authors
Kathrin Gardhouse, Amin Oueslati, Noam Kolt
Abstract
AI agents -- systems that can independently take actions to pursue complex goals with only limited human oversight -- have entered the mainstream. These systems are now being widely used to produce software, conduct business activities, and automate everyday personal tasks. While AI agents implicate many areas of law, ranging from agency law and contracts to tort liability and labor law, they present particularly pressing questions for the most globally consequential AI regulation: the European Union's AI Act. Promulgated prior to the development and widespread use of AI agents, the EU AI Act faces significant obstacles in confronting the governance challenges arising from this transformative technology, such as performance failures in autonomous task execution, the risk of misuse of agents by malicious actors, and unequal access to the economic opportunities afforded by AI agents. We systematically analyze the EU AI Act's response to these challenges, focusing on both the substantive provisions of the regulation and, crucially, the institutional frameworks that aim to support its implementation. Our analysis of the Act's allocation of monitoring and enforcement responsibilities, reliance on industry self-regulation, and level of government resourcing illustrates how a regulatory framework designed for conventional AI systems can be ill-suited to AI agents. Taken together, our findings suggest that policymakers in the EU and beyond will need to change course, and soon, if they are to effectively govern the next generation of AI technology.