New US Executive Order unlikely to satisfy EU law
Biden’s new Executive Order seems to fail on requirements established by the European Court of Justice’s (CJEU).
Biden’s new Executive Order seems to fail on requirements established by the European Court of Justice’s (CJEU).
The European Commission has managed to postpone discussions on the Council of Europe’s treaty on Artificial Intelligence.
The UK government has paused a data reform bill while ministers take a fresh look at how to replace the EU GDPR.
The order is designed to address European concerns over surveillance practices in the US.
The new regulation retroactively legalizes activity previously ruled unlawful, which could ‘establish a worrying precedent,’ complaint says.
The Court of Justice of European Union (CJEU) ruled Tuesday that data retention in Germany is not compatible with EU law.
The European Commission published a draft regulation that sets out cybersecurity requirements for “products with digital elements” placed on the EU market.
A new partial compromise on the AI Act further elaborates on the concept of the ‘extra layer’ that would qualify an AI as high-risk.
Italy supports a full ban on targeted advertising based on the tracking of users, but France seems to be on the fence.
The Czech Presidency of the EU Council circulated a new partial compromise on the upcoming data law.
The goal of the meetings is to gradually align the regulators’ approaches to privacy and better understand domestic rules in each jurisdiction.
By regulating the consent management services, the Government aims to encourage websites to use them and reduce the amount of cookie banners on the Internet.