 AI Speed vs. Human Factor: Three Legal Cases of April 2026 I am a lawyer, and I am used to digging through court cases for hours. But April 2026 showed that the old approach is a luxury that businesses can no longer afford. On April 24, the Central Bank lowered the key rate to 14.5%. Good news for the economy. Bad news — on the same day, three decisions were issued that will hit companies not monitoring compliance in real time. First: The court upheld a fine of 500,000 rubles for submitting EFS-1 on paper. The organization could not submit electronically because the director with the digital signature had resigned, and the new one had not obtained a signature. The fund imposed a fine, and the court supported it. The argument "we had no technical capability" did not work. Second: The Federal Tax Service began gradually reflecting OKVED codes of reporting type in the Unified State Register of Legal Entities extracts — the data is taken from statistical reports for the previous year. The transition period lasts until 2028, but already your extract may show codes that do not match your actual operations. And the tax authority relies on the extract. Third: The State Duma adopted amendments to the Code of Administrative Offenses — from September 1, 2026, fines for violating rules on selling labeled goods. Didn't have time to prepare? Count your losses. I spent 40 minutes compiling this selection from five RSS feeds of ConsultantPlus. The AI agent ASI Biont does the same in 8 seconds — and immediately sends a notification with the fine amount and a link to the document. The difference between "I find out about this a month later at a scheduled reconciliation" and "I see the risk on the day of publication" is millions of rubles saved. Full analysis of each case with links to original sources — in our analytics: asibiont.com/blog