Inside the EU’s Orwellian Agenda: An Interview with MEP Patrick Breyer
The EU itself has a major rule of law problem, and it doesn’t even respect the most fundamental rights.
The EU itself has a major rule of law problem, and it doesn’t even respect the most fundamental rights.
MPs insist that the government must “learn from the Huawei experience.”
The Act cleared Parliament with near-unanimous support, although many lament that the Chips Act is too little, too late and that Brussels should have no role in setting industrial policy for the entire union on such a vital issue.
A one-line statement warning about the potential harms of AI has been signed by over 350 tech CEOs, experts, and professors.
Speakers noted that there is a risk that the increasing push towards digital dominance will make European citizens not just less strong, but less free.
This mobile app is part of a wave of digitalization that’s rapidly transforming the way we create knowledge, costing us the loss of control over our private and public spaces.
The greatest risk is that all human reproduction will be put in the hands of technology—that would be the end of the human being.
A panel led by editor-in-chief Alvino-Mario Fantini agreed that “when you get beyond the rhetoric” of the EU’s legislative priorities, “you see something very different.”
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