Covering Energy Shock, Banking, Fiscal Policy, Financial Stability, Capital Markets. This episode covers urgent AI cyber threats to banking infrastructure, international AI security cooperation, and AI regulatory advancements impacting Energy Shock, Banking, Fiscal Policy, Financial Stability, and Capital Markets sectors.
Weekly news, analysis, and insights from AI regulation updates the world over
Welcome to This Week in AI Regulations for May 31, 2026.
The European Central Bank convened an emergency meeting with European banks to address a credible cyber threat posed by the AI system Claude Mythos. This advanced AI has the capability to bypass current banking IT security standards, posing an imminent risk to critical banking infrastructure. The ECB emphasized the urgent need to accelerate defensive cybersecurity measures, enhance international information sharing among banks, and implement rapid patching processes to mitigate vulnerabilities.
In Ireland, the Central Bank of Ireland’s Financial Stability Review highlighted increased global risks impacting the Irish financial system, including AI-related cyber threats. The review calls for maintaining strong capital buffers in banks, adhering to prudent lending standards, and strengthening operational resilience against cyber and AI-related risks to preserve financial stability amid heightened geopolitical tensions and market vulnerabilities.
The United Kingdom and Australia have signed a Memorandum of Understanding between the UK AI Security Institute and the Australian AI Safety Institute. This pact focuses on sharing information, collaborating on AI evaluation best practices, and conducting joint research on frontier AI risks. The agreement aims to manage the rapidly advancing AI cybersecurity capabilities and mitigate the increasing risks of cyber-attacks through international cooperation.
The International Organization of Securities Commissions, known as IOSCO, published a comprehensive AI Supervisory Toolkit for regulated entities in capital markets. The toolkit covers the AI systems lifecycle, focusing on governance, risk management, third-party risk, disclosure, and reporting. Supervisors are encouraged to use these tools to oversee AI adoption, engage with market participants, and implement policies addressing AI risks to support investor protection and market integrity.
The European Securities and Markets Authority, ESMA, reported increased quality and wider use of regulatory data, including the adoption of advanced technological tools such as generative AI and automation. This progress enhances supervisory effectiveness and reduces reporting burdens across the European Union’s financial markets, supporting orderly markets and investor protection.
In Japan, voice actor Kenjiro Tsuda has initiated legal action against TikTok for hosting AI-generated videos that mimic his voice without consent, generating revenue and infringing on his rights. This case underscores the regulatory and legal challenges related to AI misuse in intellectual property and personal rights. The demands include removal of unauthorized AI-generated content and legal accountability for platforms hosting such infringing material.
In the United States, a Kentucky school district reached confidential settlements with Meta, Snap, TikTok, and YouTube over AI-driven mental health harms linked to addictive algorithmic designs on social media platforms. This development highlights the regulatory risks associated with AI systems affecting youth mental health and calls for measures to mitigate harmful AI-driven user engagement features.
Also in the United States, the government approved a secret $9 billion funding package to enable agencies such as the National Security Agency and the Central Intelligence Agency to acquire advanced AI chips and infrastructure. This investment addresses national security concerns related to hardware shortages and the use of blacklisted AI models, including those from Anthropic. The package includes governance and usage restrictions to mitigate risks associated with these AI systems and aims to maintain the country’s AI capabilities in intelligence operations.
Finally, the Monetary Authority of Singapore, or MAS, issued a circular guiding financial institutions on risk-proportionate client Source of Wealth verification. MAS, together with the Singapore Bullion Market Association, established a working group to strengthen Singapore’s gold trading position. These initiatives support innovation and AI adoption while balancing regulatory rigor and efficiency to enhance Singapore’s competitiveness as a trusted financial hub amid global uncertainties.
That wraps up today's regulatory updates. Visit carveragents.ai for more information.