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Source channel @githubtrending · Post #14693 · May 10

#jupyter_notebook#a2a#agentic_ai#dapr#dapr_pub_sub#dapr_service_invocation#dapr_sidecar#dapr_workflow#docker#kafka#kubernetes#langmem#mcp#openai#openai_agents_sdk#openai_api#postgresql_database#rabbitmq#rancher_desktop#redis#serverless_containers The Dapr Agentic Cloud Ascent (DACA) design pattern helps you build powerful, scalable AI systems that can handle millions of AI agents working together without crashing. It uses Dapr technology with Kubernetes to efficiently manage many AI agents as lightweight virtual actors, ensuring fast response, reliability, and easy scaling. You can start small using free or low-cost cloud tools and grow to planet-scale systems. The OpenAI Agents SDK is recommended for beginners because it is simple, flexible, and gives you good control to develop AI agents quickly. This approach saves costs, avoids vendor lock-in, and supports resilient, event-driven AI workflows, making it ideal for developers aiming to create advanced, cloud-native AI applications[1][2][3][4]. https://github.com/panaversity/learn-agentic-ai

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AI & Law

@ai_and_law · Post #782 · 03/11/2026, 07:04 AM

🇪🇺European Commission Releases Second Draft of AI Content Labelling Code The European Commission has published the second draft of a voluntary Code of Practice intended to help providers and deployers comply with transparency obligations under Article 50 of the AI Act. The article requires marking and labelling of AI-generated content. The updated draft reflects feedback collected in January 2026 from hundreds of stakeholders across industry, academia, and civil society, as well as input from EU Member States and representatives of the European Parliament. The revised code is designed to reduce compliance burden while promoting open standards and the use of a common EU icon for AI-generated content. It is structured in two sections: the first addresses marking and detection obligations for generative AI system providers, introducing greater flexibility and clearer guidance; the second focuses on deployers, covering labelling of deepfakes and AI-generated text related to matters of public interest with a more practice-oriented approach. Public feedback on the draft is open until 30 March 2026. The final version of the code is expected by early June 2026, while the transparency obligations under Article 50 of the AI Act will become applicable on 2 August 2026. #AIAct#AIRegulation#AIGovernance#Transparency#Deepfakes#ContentLabelling#EUlaw