-
Rubio lands in Geneva for talks on Ukraine plan
-
Norris and Piastri disqualified from Las Vegas GP
-
Slovenia holds crunch vote on contested assisted dying law
-
Aonishiki beomes first Ukrainian to win sumo tournament
-
Holders Australia drawn with New Zealand in Rugby League World Cup
-
Vietnam flooding kills at least 90
-
Muthusamy's maiden Test century powers South Africa to 428-7
-
Myanmar junta says nearly 1,600 foreigners arrested in scam hub raids
-
US signals room for negotiation on Ukraine plan ahead of talks
-
Verstappen wins Las Vegas F1 Grand Prix, Norris edges closer to crown
-
Muthusamy anchors South Africa to 316-6 in second India Test
-
Vietnam flood death toll rises to 90
-
US denies pushing Russian 'wish list' as Ukraine plan
-
Harden's 55 leads Clippers win as Pistons streak hits 12
-
Kim's first top-10 in 14 years as Ballester wins maiden pro title
-
Gotham crowned NWSL champions after Lavelle breaks Spirit
-
Trump signals room for negotiation on Ukraine plan ahead of talks
-
Head shapes up as solution for Australia's opening woes
-
Tomorrowland bets on Chinese dance music fans with first indoor event
-
England slammed as 'brainless' after first Ashes Test capitulation
-
Slovenia to hold new vote on contested assisted dying law
-
'Beer tastes better' for Eramsus after win over Irish
-
No.1 Jeeno leads by six at LPGA Tour Championship
-
Neres double fires Napoli top in Italy
-
Bielle-Biarrey masterclass helps France hold off Australia
-
Pogba returns in Monaco loss as PSG stay top in France
-
COP30: Key reactions to climate deal
-
What did countries agree to at COP30?
-
Harden's club-record 55 points leads Clippers over Hornets
-
Amazon climate deal a 'win' for global unity but fossil fuels untouched
-
Boos, blowups and last-minute pause as a chaotic COP30 closes out
-
Farrell proud of Ireland after 'mad' Test with South Africa
-
Gaza civil defence says 21 killed in Israeli strikes
-
South Africa beat ill-disciplined Irish to end Dublin drought
-
South Africa's Marx named World Rugby player of the year
-
Ukraine, US head for talks on Trump's plan to end war
-
Newcastle dent Man City's title bid thanks to Barnes double
-
Brazil's Bolsonaro detained for trying to break ankle bracelet and flee
-
Slot takes blame after Liverpool stunned by Forest
-
Lampard hails 'outstanding' Coventry after comeback win over West Brom
-
Thousands rally in France after murder linked to anti-drug activism
-
Geopolitical fractures and Ukraine worries sap G20 summit
-
Robertson praises reshuffled All Blacks after Wales mauling
-
Spain to face Italy in Davis Cup final
-
Ukraine, US to hold Geneva talks on Trump's plan to end war
-
Lewandowski will remember scoring first goal at new Camp Nou 'forever'
-
Thousands march in France to demand action on violence against women
-
S.Africa G20 declaration highlights: minerals, debt, climate
-
Barca thrash Athletic to inaugurate rebuilt Camp Nou in style
-
Forest beat Liverpool to add to English champions' woes
Under pressure, EU to scale back digital rules
The EU will unveil plans on Wednesday to overhaul its AI and data privacy rules after coming under pressure from European and US companies.
The proposals are part of the bloc's push to cut red tape to drive greater economic growth and help European businesses catch up with American and Chinese rivals -- and reduce dependence on foreign tech giants.
EU tech chief Henna Virkkunen will present the plans on Wednesday alongside the justice commissioner in charge of data protection, Michael McGrath.
Brussels has dismissed claims that its push to "simplify" its digital rules -- deeply unpopular in the United States -- are the result of pressure from US President Donald Trump's administration.
For many EU states, the concern is that the focus on regulation has come at the expense of innovation -- although Brussels insists it remains committed to protecting European citizens' rights.
Berlin hosted a Franco-German summit on Tuesday focused on propelling the bloc to lead in the AI race during which France's Emmanuel Macron said Europe does not want to be a "vassal" dependent on US and Chinese tech companies.
Once proud of the "Brussels effect" -- referring to the influence many EU laws had on other jurisdictions around the world -- European lawmakers and rights defenders fear the EU appears to be withdrawing from being Big Tech's watchdog.
The EU executive has its eye on changes to its landmark data protection rules and the AI law that only entered into force last year.
There could be one proposal in Wednesday's package that would bring joy to nearly all Europeans: Brussels wants to tackle the annoying cookie banners that demand users' consent for tracking on websites.
- Crumbling cookie banners -
Based on draft documents that could still change and EU officials, Brussels plans to:
- redefine personal data and how companies can use it, for example allowing firms to process such data to train AI models "for purposes of a legitimate interest", but rights defenders have warned this could downgrade users' privacy
- a one-year pause on implementing many provisions on high-risk AI, for example, models that can pose dangers to safety, health or citizens' fundamental rights -- a move that will please American and European firms.
Instead of taking effect next year, the provisions would apply from 2027.
Dozens of Europe's biggest companies, including France's Airbus and Germany's Lufthansa and Mercedes-Benz, had called for a pause in July on the AI law which they warn risks stifling innovation.
Brussels has insisted European users' data privacy will be protected.
- 'Complex' rules -
One lawmaker from EU chief Ursula von der Leyen's conservative EPP grouping supported the push to simplify the digital rules.
"Europe's problem is in the excessive complexity and inconsistency of the rules we already have. Laws built in silos, overlapping obligations, and uneven enforcement create uncertainty for businesses and fracture the single market," MEP Eva Maydell told AFP.
But von der Leyen could face a difficult road ahead as the changes will need the approval of both the EU parliament and member states.
Her camp's main coalition partners have already expressed concern.
In letters sent to the European Commission last week, socialist EU lawmakers said they oppose any delay to the AI law, while the centrists warned they would stand firm against any changes that put privacy at risk.
B.AbuZeid--SF-PST