Experts say that China’s AI development shows that regulation does not have to be a barrier for innovation. View on euronews
Google looks to have expanded its enforcement of its site reputation abuse policy to European regions this week. Google began enforcement in the US back in May but Google seems to have issued a ton of these manual actions (manual penalties) to European based sites.
Google has begun its final attempt to overturn a €4.3 billion (about $4.4 billion) fine it received from the EU over its Android market dominance back in 2018. The antitrust decision was upheld in 2022 but reduced to €4.
LONDON: Christian Kroll has long worried about Europe’s dependence on US Big Tech, but now the head of German search engine Ecosia has a new tool to take on Google and Microsoft. Ecosia, which uses advertising profits from its 20 million users to plant ...
Search Engine Land » SEO » Google sending manual actions for site reputation abuse in Europe? Chat with SearchBot Please note that your conversations will be recorded. It appears Google may be ...
Ireland's protection commission said it had also requested information from DeepSeek about data processing in relation to Irish users
European politicians and advocacy groups say the region’s legislation will not dismantle the monopolies of Big Tech companies.
A group of 18 former European heads of state have called on the European Commission to break up Google’s highly lucrative advertising-technology business, claiming it erodes Europe’s media ...
Mistral AI was hailed as a potential global leader in the technology. But it has lost ground to US rivals — and now China’s emerging star
I would prefer to stay out of politics,” Elon Musk told his followers in 2021, on the platform then known as Twitter. Plenty has changed since then. The world’s richest man appears to have a new goal: upending Europe.
In the past, the EU has not hesitated to try to apply European law to tech companies. Over the past decade, for example, Google has faced three fines totaling more than $8 billion for breaking antitrust law (though one of these fines was overturned by the EU’s General Court in 2024).