The European Union has published its AI content labelling playbook, a voluntary Code of Practice meant to help companies meet transparency rules that become law across the bloc on August 2 onwards. The European Commission released the final Code on 10 June, setting out practical steps for the businesses that build and use generative AI to mark […]
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The investigation could lead to significant regulatory changes, impacting Meta's revenue model and setting a precedent for tech accountability.
The post European Commission escalates probe into Meta’s addictive design for children appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Ripple secured preliminary MiCA CASP approval to expand regulated services across Europe. The license supports cryptoasset and stablecoin payments for banks and fintech firms. Full approval would strengthen Ripple’s European footprint under a unified framework. Ripple has secured preliminary approval for a Crypto Asset Service Provider license in Luxembourg under the European Union’s Markets in […]
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The digital euro could reshape EU financial systems, challenging traditional banks and payment processors while enhancing regulatory control.
The post European Union lawmakers advance legal framework for digital euro appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
European Commission consultation (May 20–Aug 31, 2026) spotlights admin keys, governance and front-end control in DeFi. Teams can map exposure and document controls now.
The European Commission’s latest push to reduce dependence on foreign technology providers is not surprising. If Europe believes that critical digital services could be disrupted by foreign governments, foreign legal systems, or foreign-owned providers, it will, of course, respond. That concern is now being expressed in the language of “kill switch” risk, meaning the fear that the cloud, AI, or semiconductor services that Europe depends on could be interrupted or constrained by forces beyond its control.
At a high level, that concern is valid. Europe is right to worry about strategic dependence. If critical public services, regulated workloads, or national-interest systems rely on infrastructure controlled elsewhere, sovereignty becomes more than a policy slogan. It becomes an architectural issue. However, I am skeptical of the leap from identifying the problem to assuming that a policy response will produce a cleaner, safer, or even more sovereign market. There is a good chance it may
The European Commission’s latest push to reduce dependence on foreign technology providers is not surprising. If Europe believes that critical digital services could be disrupted by foreign governments, foreign legal systems, or foreign-owned providers, it will, of course, respond. That concern is now being expressed in the language of “kill switch” risk, meaning the fear that the cloud, AI, or semiconductor services that Europe depends on could be interrupted or constrained by forces beyond its control.
At a high level, that concern is valid. Europe is right to worry about strategic dependence. If critical public services, regulated workloads, or national-interest systems rely on infrastructure controlled elsewhere, sovereignty becomes more than a policy slogan. It becomes an architectural issue. However, I am skeptical of the leap from identifying the problem to assuming that a policy response will produce a cleaner, safer, or even more sovereign market. There is a good chance it may
The EU's levy could reshape e-commerce dynamics, pressuring Chinese platforms to adapt and potentially prompting further regulatory measures.
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