SOFTSWISS has positioned itself at the centre of Europe's AI governance conversation, with Chief AI Officer Denis Romanovskiy addressing regulatory frameworks and corporate accountability at Doers Summit Limassol 2026.
The iGaming technology provider participated in two high-level discussions examining how European companies navigate AI integration while managing increasing regulatory pressure under frameworks including the EU AI Act and GDPR.
Diplomatic and Commercial AI Perspectives
Romanovskiy first participated in the invite-only "United Cultures: Economic Diplomacy Brunch", organised as part of Cyprus' Presidency of the Council of the European Union programme. The session brought together diplomats, business leaders, and technology executives to discuss Europe's position in the global AI race.
During the panel "Europe in the AI Era: Positioning Between Global Superpowers", participants examined how European companies balance AI integration with growing regulatory pressure under established frameworks.
Corporate AI Ownership Challenges

The second panel, "Who Owns AI in Your Company? The Rise of the Chief AI Officer", saw Romanovskiy join technology and commercial leaders from Andersen and ITML to address organisational responsibility questions.
The discussion focused on what happens when AI adoption spreads faster than internal governance, particularly in companies where teams move quickly and ownership overlaps across product, legal, compliance, and commercial functions.
"Many companies already use AI across multiple departments, but responsibility often remains fragmented. The main challenge is defining who owns the impact of those systems on customers, operations, and compliance."
— Denis Romanovskiy, Chief AI Officer at SOFTSWISS
The conversation questioned whether every business requires a dedicated Chief AI Officer, with Romanovskiy arguing that assigning clear accountability matters more than adding executive titles for many growing companies.
Platform Integration Context
SOFTSWISS hosted a branded ice cream truck at the summit venue, providing networking space for founders, operators, investors, and technology leaders to continue discussions beyond formal sessions.
The summit appearances followed recent technology launches including the Prediction Markets Platform, AI-related workflow automation tools within the Casino Platform, and internal cybersecurity platform Pipeguard, which recently received a Global Tech Award 2026.
Regulatory Signal for iGaming
The participation signals how iGaming technology providers are engaging proactively with European AI governance frameworks rather than waiting for regulatory clarity. With AI increasingly embedded in compliance monitoring, risk assessment, and operational decisions, establishing clear accountability structures becomes critical for operators navigating multiple jurisdictions with evolving AI regulations.




