Bull and Foxconn are establishing European manufacturing capacity for AI and cloud infrastructure in Czechia and France to strengthen technological sovereignty and supply chain independence.
Large technology companies are systematically contesting European GDPR fines in court, with significant implications for the implementation of AI regulation.
Microsoft’s Entra Passkeys enable phishing-resistant authentication on private and unmanaged endpoints, reducing the attack surface for password-based compromises.
The EU is collecting feedback until 23 June 2026 on the clarity and practical applicability of its guidelines for classifying high-risk AI systems under the AI Act.
The Commission clarifies through practical examples which AI systems are classified as high-risk under Article 6 of the EU AI Act and are therefore subject to stricter regulatory requirements.
Temu must pay €200 million because the company’s risk assessment does not meet DSA standards and illegal products such as unsafe chargers and toys have been distributed uncontrolled on the platform.
The Commission clarifies requirements for the recognition and oversight of trusted flaggers, who can report illegal online content to platforms on a prioritized basis.
Countries are storing critical government data in secured data centers of other states to protect them from cyberattacks and military invasion — a model that has spread since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
Brussels plans with Imec and SPRIND to build European AI chip manufacturing as part of Chips Act 2.0 to reduce dependence on US and Asian manufacturers.
The EU makes AI data centers in Europe dependent on strict sustainability requirements and threatens major corporations with market exclusion if they do not commit to renewable energy and heat utilization.