Close Menu

    Stay Ahead with Exclusive Updates!

    Enter your email below and be the first to know what’s happening in the ever-evolving world of technology!

    What's Hot

    Google TPU Chips Threatens Nvidia’s GPU Dominance

    January 13, 2026

    Cybersecurity Funding Increases as AI-Driven Threats Become More Sophisticated 

    January 12, 2026

    Coinbase Bets on Stablecoin and On-Chain Growth as Key Market Drivers in 2026 Strategy

    January 10, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Facebook X (Twitter)
    PhronewsPhronews
    • Home
    • Big Tech & Startups

      Google TPU Chips Threatens Nvidia’s GPU Dominance

      January 13, 2026

      Nvidia in Talks to Acquire AI21 Labs in $3B Generative AI Deal

      January 8, 2026

      Google Centralizes AI Development Around Gemini as Partners Prepare AI Vision Launch at CES 2026

      January 8, 2026

      Nvidia Aims to Begin H200 Chip Shipments to China by Mid-February

      January 7, 2026

      Cisco in Advanced Talks to Acquire Cybersecurity Startup Axonius for $2 billion

      January 7, 2026
    • Crypto

      Coinbase Bets on Stablecoin and On-Chain Growth as Key Market Drivers in 2026 Strategy

      January 10, 2026

      Tether Faces Ongoing Transparency Questions and Reserve Scrutiny Amid Massive Bitcoin Accumulation

      January 5, 2026

      Kanye West YZY Coin Crash Follows $3B Hype Launch

      August 24, 2025

      Crypto Markets Rally as GENIUS Act Nears Stablecoin Regulation Breakthrough

      July 23, 2025

      Lightchain and Ethereum Spark AI Chain Revolution

      July 23, 2025
    • Gadgets & Smart Tech
      Featured

      Meta Poaches Apple Design Exec Alan Dye to Lead a New Creative Studio

      By preciousDecember 11, 202526
      Recent

      Meta Poaches Apple Design Exec Alan Dye to Lead a New Creative Studio

      December 11, 2025

      Samsung Teases DX Vision and New AI Experiences Ahead of CES 2026

      December 10, 2025

      Why Amazon’s New AI Glasses Are Changing Delivery

      November 10, 2025
    • Cybersecurity & Online Safety

      Cybersecurity Funding Increases as AI-Driven Threats Become More Sophisticated 

      January 12, 2026

      Cisco in Advanced Talks to Acquire Cybersecurity Startup Axonius for $2 billion

      January 7, 2026

      Microsoft Pushes Zero-Trust as the Enterprise Default in 2026 Security Roadmap

      January 3, 2026

      Google Cloud expands Security Services Partnership with Palo Alto Networks in a $10B deal

      December 29, 2025

      Google issues emergency Pixel update after reports of spyware attacks

      December 24, 2025
    PhronewsPhronews
    Home»Artificial Intelligence & The Future»EU Rolls Back Parts of GDPR and the AI Act in Regulatory U-turn
    Artificial Intelligence & The Future

    EU Rolls Back Parts of GDPR and the AI Act in Regulatory U-turn

    preciousBy preciousNovember 22, 2025No Comments11 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email
    Photo Credit: Nicolas Economou/NurPhoto via Getty Images

    The European Union (EU) is quietly rewriting the rulebook that once made it the world’s toughest digital regulator, releasing a proposal law that involves rolling back parts of the GDPR and delaying core provisions of the artificial intelligence (AI) Act in the name of economic competitiveness and growth. 

    Touted as the EU’s Digital Omnibus it stands as a sharp reversal from the EU’s decade-long reputation as the world’s toughest enforcer of digital rights and privacy.

    It goes without saying that these changes are being driven by mounting pressure from tech giants, including recent pressure from the U.S. President Donald Trump, concerns about Europe’s competitiveness in artificial intelligence, and a desire to simplify rules for businesses. 

    The impact of this rollback will ripple across tech companies, startups, everyday users across the continent, and more importantly accelerate tech innovation. 

    The EU Makes Major Changes to GDPR

    The most significant change issued by the EU is targeted at the use of personal data for AI training. Under the proposed new rules, companies in Europe can now use pseudonymized and anonymized data to train AI models without needing explicit consent from individuals.

    This is a major departure from the GDPR’s original framework, which required clear and informed consent for any processing of personal data. The Commission, being the executive branch of the EU, frames this move as a “legitimate interest,” arguing that it is necessary for innovation and economic growth across the continent. 

    Privacy advocates however warn that this will create a loophole that will allow tech firms to exploit vast amounts of European data with minimal oversight.

    Another important change this move will herald is the simplification of cookie consent banners. The familiar pop-ups that have long plagued European websites since GDPR’s launch will be replaced with browser-level controls. 

    Instead of requiring users to click “accept” or “reject” every time they visit a site, browsers will manage non-risk cookies centrally. This action is intended to reduce what is known as consent fatigue and make the web experience smoother, although critics argue this will weaken privacy protections by shifting from opt-in to opt-out consent. As such, the definition of personal data will further be narrowed. 

    AI Act Enforcement Delayed

    The AI Act, which was supposed to set a global standard for regulating artificial intelligence in Europe, will also be facing a major setback. 

    The rules for high-risk AI systems, those used in areas like biometric identification, law enforcement, and critical infrastructure, were originally set to take effect in August 2026. Now, full implementation has been pushed back to December 2027, with even some sector-specific rules delayed until August 2028.

    While this gives companies in the region ample time to adapt, it also creates uncertainties. One is the possibility of companies taking advantage of the elongated period, which means they won’t be subjected to the confines of the Act if anything criminal were to happen and that strict accountability measures will be on hold for this period of time.

    Two, however, is the fact that the Commission may still retain the power to accelerate enforcement if it deems it necessary, as there’s the urgent need for Europe to play catch-up in the AI arms race. 

    Why This Matters Now

    The timing of this rollback is actually no coincidence. For a while now, Europe has been struggling to maintain pace with the U.S. and China, especially in the rapidly evolving AI race, with American tech giants like OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic, alongside China’s DeepSeek dominating the global AI landscape.

    However, Europe, despite its bulky and strict regulatory laws, still lacks the computational power and capital to build AI systems that are capable of standing out and to further compete. 

    It is why the EU’s move is touted as a response to months of increasing pressure from tech companies as well as from the U.S. government, as President Trump recently argued that Europe’s strict rules were stifling innovation.

    On the one hand, Mario Draghi, the former Italian Prime Minister and ex-President of the European Central Bank, recently called out the European digital regulations, warning that they were holding back the continent’s competitiveness.

    On the other hand, civil rights organizations and privacy advocates are also sounding the alarm. Max Schrems, a lawyer and activist, who is known for carrying out campaigns against Facebook for its violations of Europe’s privacy laws, called EU’s Digital Omnibus “the biggest attack on European digital rights in years.”

    Schrems further argued that the Commission’s claim to “maintain the highest standards” is misleading, as the current proposals aim to undermine the said standards.

    “The Digital Omnibus would mainly benefit big tech, while failing to provide any tangible benefits to average EU companies,” the Austrian activist said in a statement. “This proposed reform is a sign of panic around shaping Europe’s digital future, not a sign of leadership. What we really need is a strategic, well-designed long-term plan to move Europe ahead.”

    The Irish Council for Civil Liberties also echoed this argument, warning that Europe is trading its citizen’s privacy rights to give space for the U.S and Chinese tech giants’ dominance across the continent. 

    Additionally, there is also the argument that Europe’s real problem may not be excessive regulation but weak enforcement of existing rules. As such, there’s the fear that the rollback will set a dangerous precedent, and not just for Europe but for the rest of the world. 

    The GDPR has influenced privacy laws across continental borders, in countries like Brazil, India, etc. Although the Digital Omnibus proposal still needs approval from EU member states and the European parliament, if Brussels reverses course and goes through with it, the act could weaken global privacy standards and set precedent for other countries to follow suit.

    AI Act AI Act delay anonymized data AI training Europe Artificial Intelligence biometric AI regulation Europe Brazil India privacy laws browser-level cookie controls consent fatigue reduction cookie consent simplification EU critical infrastructure AI rules data protection weakening Europe Digital Omnibus digital rights Europe debate EU AI Act enforcement delay EU big tech influence concerns EU competitiveness AI EU Digital Omnibus EU digital regulation rollback EU digital rights concerns EU economic growth digital policy EU legislative proposal 2025 EU personal data definition change EU privacy law reform EU regulatory shift Europe AI innovation pressure Europe AI race competitiveness European privacy rollback risks GDPR GDPR changes 2025 GDPR global influence GDPR rollback proposal global privacy standards impact high-risk AI systems delay Irish Council for Civil Liberties warning law enforcement AI rules EU legitimate interest AI data Mario Draghi EU regulation critique Max Schrems GDPR comments privacy advocates EU reform Privacy laws and regulations pseudonymized data for AI training tech giants lobbying EU Trump pressure EU tech rules
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email
    precious
    • LinkedIn

    I’m Precious Amusat, Phronews’ Content Writer. I conduct in-depth research and write on the latest developments in the tech industry, including trends in big tech, startups, cybersecurity, artificial intelligence and their global impacts. When I’m off the clock, you’ll find me cheering on women’s footy, curled up with a romance novel, or binge-watching crime thrillers.

    Related Posts

    Google TPU Chips Threatens Nvidia’s GPU Dominance

    January 13, 2026

    Cybersecurity Funding Increases as AI-Driven Threats Become More Sophisticated 

    January 12, 2026

    Nvidia in Talks to Acquire AI21 Labs in $3B Generative AI Deal

    January 8, 2026

    Comments are closed.

    Top Posts

    MIT Study Reveals ChatGPT Impairs Brain Activity & Thinking

    June 29, 2025131

    From Ally to Adversary: What Elon Musk’s Feud with Trump Means for the EV Industry

    June 6, 202587

    Coinbase Hack 2025: Everything we know so far.

    May 21, 202583

    Coinbase responds to hack: customer impact and official statement

    May 22, 202579
    Don't Miss
    Artificial Intelligence & The Future

    Google TPU Chips Threatens Nvidia’s GPU Dominance

    By preciousJanuary 13, 20263

    Google’s Tensor Processing Units (TPUs) pose a growing challenge to Nvidia’s dominance in AI hardware…

    Cybersecurity Funding Increases as AI-Driven Threats Become More Sophisticated 

    January 12, 2026

    Coinbase Bets on Stablecoin and On-Chain Growth as Key Market Drivers in 2026 Strategy

    January 10, 2026

    Nvidia in Talks to Acquire AI21 Labs in $3B Generative AI Deal

    January 8, 2026
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    About Us
    About Us

    Evolving from Phronesis News, Phronews brings deep insight and smart analysis to the world of technology. Stay informed, stay ahead, and navigate tech with wisdom.
    We're accepting new partnerships right now.

    Email Us: info@phronews.com

    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube
    Our Picks
    Most Popular

    MIT Study Reveals ChatGPT Impairs Brain Activity & Thinking

    June 29, 2025131

    From Ally to Adversary: What Elon Musk’s Feud with Trump Means for the EV Industry

    June 6, 202587

    Coinbase Hack 2025: Everything we know so far.

    May 21, 202583
    © 2025. Phronews.
    • Home
    • About Us
    • Get In Touch
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.