Regulatory Counsel, Content & Frontier AI Regulation

Anthropic Anthropic · AI Frontier · Dublin, Ireland · Legal

Legal counsel role focused on global online content regulation and interfacing with EU regulators on AI and content regulation. Responsibilities include regulatory-readiness counseling, day-to-day advice, and engagement with regulators on laws like the EU AI Act and DSA.

What you'd actually do

  1. Serve as Anthropic's global in-house regulatory counsel for online content regulation — including the DSA, the UK Online Safety Act, Australia's Online Safety Act, and emerging APAC and other international regimes — covering applicability analysis, readiness, day-to-day advice, and compliance-programme design and maintenance.
  2. Support the non-contentious side of Anthropic's regulatory engagement with European regulators on content regulation and AI regulations — including with the European AI Office, the European Commission, national AI competent authorities, Digital Services Coordinators, Ofcom, and their counterparts internationally — including notifications, structured dialogues, RFIs, transparency reporting, and codes-of-practice processes.
  3. Provide upfront regulatory-readiness counselling on emerging legislation: track legislative and supervisory developments across international markets, assess applicability and impact on Anthropic's business and products, identify implementation risks, and design compliance approaches well in advance of obligations taking effect
  4. Provide ongoing advice once laws are in force: counsel legal, compliance and business teams on day-to-day regulatory questions, translate complex requirements into practical guidance, and help build and maintain scalable compliance programmes
  5. Partner with Frontier AI Regulatory Counsel on EU AI Act engagement, translating Anthropic's frontier-AI compliance positions into regulator-facing submissions and bringing regulator expectations back into our substantive work

Skills

Required

  • Qualification to practise law in at least one EU member state or in the UK, with good standing
  • Substantive depth in international content regulation (DSA, UK Online Safety Act, or similar)
  • Hands-on experience advising a technology business (in-house or at a leading law firm) on emerging regulatory regimes, including translating ambiguous or evolving rules into practical, defensible compliance approaches
  • Direct experience engaging with regulators or supervisory bodies in a non-contentious capacity (e.g. the European AI Office, European Commission, national AI competent authorities, Digital Services Coordinators, Ofcom, or equivalent international supervisors)
  • Strong understanding of how EU law-making and supervisory practice actually works, including delegated and implementing acts, guidelines, codes of practice, and the interplay between EU- and member-state-level enforcement
  • Strong cross-functional collaboration skills and the ability to communicate complex legal concepts clearly to technical, policy, product and business audiences

Nice to have

  • 10–12 years of regulatory legal experience working at a frontier AI company, large online platform, or other high-growth technology business operating under DSA, OSA, EU AI Act or equivalent international regimes
  • Experience contributing to industry codes of practice, regulator-led structured dialogues, or trade association engagement on AI or content regulation
  • Familiarity with adjacent regimes that frequently intersect with content regulation internationally, e.g. privacy, copyright, product safety, and consumer protection
  • A track record of building constructive long-term relationships with regulators
  • Comfort with ambiguity and a track record of developing novel compliance approaches in areas without established precedent
  • A passion for responsible AI development and for getting the balance right between innovation and appropriate safeguards

What the JD emphasized

  • EU AI Act
  • content regulation
  • regulatory regimes