
Photo Courtesy: Michelle Colon
As the world’s biggest economies accelerate toward conflicting AI and data laws, global businesses are running out of room to maneuver. A new kind of legal expert — trained across systems, cultures, and regulatory philosophies — is emerging as the essential interpreter in an era of digital fragmentation.
The Compliance Storm No One Was Prepared For
Artificial Intelligence is moving faster than any regulatory framework in history — and governments are scrambling to catch up. The result is a patchwork of incompatible rules stretching across continents:
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The EU AI Act, the world’s first comprehensive AI law
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The U.S. DOJ’s new cross-border data access rules
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India’s sweeping DPDP Act, reshaping data governance across Asia
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The UK’s innovation-first approach, diverging sharply from Brussels
This fractured landscape has created what some experts call a Digital Iron Curtain: a world where AI models, data workflows, and even content moderation policies must be rewritten not once, but differently for every jurisdiction.
For multinational companies, this isn’t a regulatory headache.
It’s an existential operational threat.
“We’ve never seen this level of divergence,” says one tech policy analyst. “Global compliance is no longer a process — it’s an equation that keeps changing.”
The shift has created urgent demand for a new kind of legal counsel — one who can operate on multiple legal ‘frequencies’ at once, understand cultural context, and build compliance systems that actually function across borders.
Meet the Cross-Border Counsel Built for This Moment
Enter Krishan (“Krish”) Thakker, Esq., a tri-citizen (India/US/UK) with deep comparative law training and a background that mirrors the global realignment unfolding today.
Educated in two of the world’s complex legal systems —
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LLB, King’s College London
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J.D., Columbia Law School (entered at 18, graduated at 21)
Thakker represents a new category of legal practitioner: The cross-border compliance architect.
His value proposition is unusually clear in a field known for opacity:
“The real challenge isn’t writing memos about the law — it’s turning vague regulatory anxiety into clear compliance architectures a business can actually execute.”
This ability to translate chaos into clarity has made him a sought-after advisor in the high-pressure worlds of technology, platform governance, AI systems, and global data workflows.
Krish’s legal career began with significant early achievements. He founded the London Universities Moot Court Shield (LUMS) and contributed to Jamaica for Justice, working on human-rights casework. These formative experiences shaped his understanding of legal frameworks, social justice, and international law. The cross-cultural training he received, coupled with his work in the UK, US, and India, allowed him to understand the intersections of law, identity, and governance — valuable skills in today’s fragmented regulatory world.
The Global AI & Data Split: Why Companies Are Struggling

Photo Courtesy: APALSA (Asian Pacific American Law Student Association)
The deeper problem isn’t simply that regulations differ — it’s that they contradict one another:
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EU law may require transparency that U.S. national security rules restrict.
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India’s DPDP Act may allow processes that the EU GDPR forbids.
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U.S. content moderation mandates can directly conflict with upcoming EU platform rules.
The result?
A multinational company could be simultaneously over-compliant in one region and illegal in another.
Krish’s rare background allows him to decode these contradictions.
Growing up across South Asian, East African, and British cultures, with parents who migrated from Uganda and Tanzania to the UK in the 1960s–70s — gave him an early education in how law, identity, and governance intersect.
That lived experience became a professional advantage.
It built the foundation for a worldview where:
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Regulatory conflict isn’t surprising
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Legal systems must be translated, not memorized
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Compliance must be culturally and operationally adaptable
His dual-system (UK–US) training now powers his work on:
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AI governance frameworks
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Global data policies
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Cross-border content moderation mandates
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IP and platform-liability compliance
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Investigations and operational risk
In a splintered digital world, he operates as an interpreter between systems that no longer align.
Inside the New Role of Cross-Border Counsel
Traditional lawyers advise on what the law says.
Cross-border counsel must explain what the law means in practice when three governments disagree with each other.
Krish’s work centers on creating:
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Executable compliance playbooks
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Risk-scoring systems for AI and data workflows
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Operational controls for platform behavior
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Internal governance structures for global teams
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Cross-jurisdictional investigation frameworks
His clients don’t need academic analysis — they need systems that work in the real world, across multiple regulators who don’t share the same rulebook. This is where Krish excels.
Toward a More Coherent Future: The Podcasts
Recognizing that the regulatory world is becoming inaccessible even to practitioners, Krish is launching his podcasts dedicated to:
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Platform accountability
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AI and data governance
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Global transparency mandates
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The politics inside policy
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Conversations with in-house counsel, technologists, policymakers, and NGO leaders
In addition to these podcasts, Krish has also taken part in the series, Cybersecurity Chronicles. These shows continue to demystify the new legal landscape and bring complex global regulations into a public space where founders, compliance teams, and policymakers can actually understand what’s at stake. In many ways, the podcasts act as the missing link between academia, policy, and practice.

Photo Courtesy: Michelle Colon
Why Cross-Border Counsel Like Krish Are Becoming Essential
In a world where regulation evolves faster than companies can respond, compliance has become a strategic function, not a legal one — and the experts needed to navigate it are increasingly rare.
Krishan Thakker represents this new breed of counsel — part translator, part architect, part advocate — operating at the intersection of:
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AI regulation
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Cross-border policy
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National security data rules
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Global platform governance
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Multicultural interpretation
As nations build digital walls — some transparent, some fortified — cross-border counsel like Krish may be the only bridge as companies attempt to operate coherently in a fragmented world.
In the coming era of AI and global compliance, one truth is becoming clear:
The future will not belong to the fastest innovators — but to the clearest interpreters.
And interpreters like Krish are exactly what this moment demands.
About Krishan Thakker Esq.
Krishan (“Krish”) Thakker, Esq., is a global counsel and compliance strategist with experience in the US, UK, and India. He holds an LLB from King’s College London and a J.D. from Columbia Law School. Krish is the founder of the London Universities Moot Court Shield (LUMS) and has worked with Jamaica for Justice on human-rights casework. He is also an advocate for underrepresented communities within the legal profession and is currently launching many podcasts focused on data governance, platform accountability, and AI policy.
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