AI Literacy Foundation · Copenhagen

Working on what artificial intelligence will mean for the people the technology touches.

A Danish voluntary association. We work with and for people. We advance AI literacy and responsible AI use in the public sector, in civil society, in small and medium-sized enterprises, and in the communities AI touches. From Denmark, we contribute to the broader public conversation on how AI should be built, deployed, and governed.

Accountable to teachers

The foundation, in the open.

We commit to publishing our state honestly. Counters move only when the work is real and verifiable.

Live status
Legal form Voluntary association, Denmark
CVR number 46487869
Municipality Copenhagen
Verified by Goodstack for Good Causes TechSoup Denmark
Active programs 6
People trained in AI literacy 327
AI tool reviews completed 0
Memos published 4
Public corrections logged 128
Last updated · 18 May 2026

A peer in the AI conversation, not a downstream observer.

EU AI Act European Union Artificial Intelligence Act
GDPR General Data Protection Regulation
OECD AI Principles Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
UNESCO Ethics of AI United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
CoE AI Convention Council of Europe Framework Convention on Artificial Intelligence
Article 4 · EU AI Act AI literacy obligation for organizations deploying AI

The work of the AI Literacy Foundation is part of the broader conversation about how artificial intelligence should be built, deployed, and governed. We engage with the major regulatory and ethical frameworks shaping that conversation, including the EU AI Act, the General Data Protection Regulation, the OECD AI Principles, and the UNESCO Recommendation on the Ethics of AI.

We do not aim to replicate the work of large institutions. We aim to bring the principles those frameworks articulate into a specific context: Danish civil society, the public sector, and the communities most affected by AI deployment. Our contribution is to make these principles practically actionable for organizations and people who do not have direct access to the rooms where standards are written.

"The benefits of artificial intelligence should not belong only to large companies, technical experts, or wealthy institutions. They should be understood, questioned, shaped, and used by people, communities, civil society, public institutions, educators, and organizations of every size."

Founding mandate. AI Literacy Foundation.