Kaizen partners with RegGenome to expand content on Single Rulebook
03 December 2024 UK
Image: MrBeer/stock.adobe.com
Kaizen has partnered with RegGenome to expand the coverage and content of its platform for searching and navigating global regulation using AI.
To support the digitisation of regulation, both parties will work together to provide fast and efficient access to global regulatory rules, jurisdictions, and taxonomies on the Single Rulebook platform.
Chris Dingley, CEO of Single Rulebook, says: “Working with RegGenome’s AI solution for regulatory data and information means that we will be able to expand the Single Rulebook platform and content rapidly for our clients, continuing and enhancing our efforts to support them with the burden of managing global regulation.”
The Single Rulebook platform currently allows financial firms to manage regulatory change with functions like rule maps, labels, and annotations, which can be pinned to regulatory rules and shared across global organisations.
Dingley explains that in early 2025, the platform’s clients will be able to access regulatory content covering all major global financial markets, including the coverage of US federal regulators and agencies, European national law, and global G20 members.
In addition to core financial services regulations, Single Rulebook users will also be able to investigate emerging compliance requirements for cryptocurrency, cyber security, and digital operational resilience, he adds.
Mark Johnston, CEO of RegGenome, comments: “By combining our extensive regulatory content with Single Rulebook's advanced search and analytics capabilities, we're enabling financial institutions to better navigate the complex regulatory landscape.”
RegGenome processes global regulation using AI to transform what is human-readable into machine-readable and machine-consumable data.
It is part of the Regulatory Genome Project (RGP), a public-private initiative between the University of Cambridge, Judge Business School, and RegGenome, which aims to build and review a set of open-access regulatory information structures — known as the Cambridge Regulatory Genome (CRG) — and make available a global repository of aggregated, structured regulatory data.
To support the digitisation of regulation, both parties will work together to provide fast and efficient access to global regulatory rules, jurisdictions, and taxonomies on the Single Rulebook platform.
Chris Dingley, CEO of Single Rulebook, says: “Working with RegGenome’s AI solution for regulatory data and information means that we will be able to expand the Single Rulebook platform and content rapidly for our clients, continuing and enhancing our efforts to support them with the burden of managing global regulation.”
The Single Rulebook platform currently allows financial firms to manage regulatory change with functions like rule maps, labels, and annotations, which can be pinned to regulatory rules and shared across global organisations.
Dingley explains that in early 2025, the platform’s clients will be able to access regulatory content covering all major global financial markets, including the coverage of US federal regulators and agencies, European national law, and global G20 members.
In addition to core financial services regulations, Single Rulebook users will also be able to investigate emerging compliance requirements for cryptocurrency, cyber security, and digital operational resilience, he adds.
Mark Johnston, CEO of RegGenome, comments: “By combining our extensive regulatory content with Single Rulebook's advanced search and analytics capabilities, we're enabling financial institutions to better navigate the complex regulatory landscape.”
RegGenome processes global regulation using AI to transform what is human-readable into machine-readable and machine-consumable data.
It is part of the Regulatory Genome Project (RGP), a public-private initiative between the University of Cambridge, Judge Business School, and RegGenome, which aims to build and review a set of open-access regulatory information structures — known as the Cambridge Regulatory Genome (CRG) — and make available a global repository of aggregated, structured regulatory data.
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