Platform

Your team stops reading legislation. It starts acting on it.

Legiseye monitors six jurisdictions continuously, extracts what each law actually requires, and puts that information in front of your team in the format that is most useful at the moment they need it.

US, EU, UK, Turkey, Germany & France. Continuous monitoring. Live in days.


What your team gets

The monitoring feed

When a new regulation drops, a bill advances, or an existing law is amended, it appears in your feed within hours, not at the end of a weekly digest you may or may not open. Legiseye pulls from official legislative sources across the US, EU, UK, Turkey, Germany, and France, so you are not reading a summary of a summary. The coverage is specific: if the EU Commission publishes a delegated act that amends an existing regulation your team tracks, that update is surfaced on its own, tagged to the parent legislation, with the changed provisions identified. Your team sees what changed, not just that something changed.

Extracted obligations

Reading legislation is one problem. Knowing what it actually requires your organization to do is a different one. Legiseye's extraction layer pulls out the operative obligations from each piece of legislation and presents them in structured form: who the obligation applies to, what action is required, and what the relevant article or provision is. This is not a plain-text summary. It is a structured record of each requirement, which means you can filter, search, and map obligations across jurisdictions without reading the source text yourself each time.

The weekly briefing

Once a week, a briefing lands in your inbox. It covers everything that moved in your tracked jurisdictions during the previous seven days: new legislation, amendments, consultations opened, obligations added or modified. The briefing is not a newsletter with editorial commentary. It is a structured summary of regulatory activity, organized by jurisdiction, with links to the source material and the relevant extracted obligations. If nothing material happened in a given jurisdiction that week, it says so. No filler to make the email look substantial.

The gap analysis

Once your team uploads internal policies or compliance documentation, Legiseye maps them against the obligation library for your tracked jurisdictions. The output is a structured view of your current posture: which obligations are addressed in your documentation, which are partially covered, and which have no corresponding policy language at all. This is updated when legislation changes and when you upload new documents, so the view reflects your actual current state rather than a point-in-time assessment that ages out immediately.

Jurisdiction coverage

Legiseye covers six jurisdictions: the United States, the European Union, the United Kingdom, Turkey, Germany, and France. For each jurisdiction, coverage includes primary legislation, regulatory guidance, and where available, enforcement activity. EU coverage includes both EU-level instruments and the national implementation layer for Germany and France, which matters because transposition timelines and national deviations create real compliance questions that EU-level tracking alone does not answer. US coverage spans federal legislation and selected agency rulemaking in areas with high cross-border relevance. Turkey is included because of its distinct data protection and AI governance trajectory and the number of international organizations with operational presence there.


Who uses this

Compliance officer at a 200-person fintech

Running a compliance function without a large team means staying current across multiple jurisdictions without the staff hours to read everything yourself. The monitoring feed and weekly briefing replace the combination of Google Alerts, newsletter subscriptions, and ad-hoc checks that most compliance officers at this size company rely on. The obligation extraction means your team can assess applicability without a full legal review every time something new drops.

Legal ops at a SaaS company selling into the EU

You are not a regulated entity in the financial services sense, but you have customers under GDPR, you may be subject to the EU AI Act depending on what your product does, and you are watching the Data Act and the Cyber Resilience Act for product implications. Legiseye gives your legal ops function a single place to track EU regulatory development, with extracted obligations that translate directly into questions for your product and engineering teams. The gap analysis tells you whether your current privacy documentation and terms cover what the regulations actually require.

Law firm advising on multi-jurisdiction exposure

Your clients are asking about regulatory risk across multiple markets simultaneously, and the answer requires tracking what is actually law versus what is in proposal stage versus what is adopted but not yet in force. Legiseye's jurisdiction coverage and obligation extraction give your team a starting point that is faster and more current than traditional legal research for monitoring work. The platform does not replace legal judgment on application questions, but it covers the surveillance layer that currently consumes associate hours without adding analytical value.


Ready to see it?

If you are evaluating regulatory intelligence tools for your team, the most direct path is a demo against your actual jurisdiction set and use case. We will show you the monitoring feed, the obligation extraction, and if you have documentation ready, the gap analysis against your current policies.

Or reach out directly at enterprise@legiseye.com. No sales process. A conversation with someone who knows the platform.