
Freedom of Religion vs Big Tech
The impersonality of major digital operators generates a vacuum of responsibility that conflicts with the fundamental rights enshrined by the European Union.

The impersonality of major digital operators generates a vacuum of responsibility that conflicts with the fundamental rights enshrined by the European Union.

The White House is set to act in response to Brussels fining Google.

The U.S. Department of Justice is seeking to break up the data giant to settle monopoly concerns.

Tech reporters say the move could reshape how large companies in the industry do business.

Edited headlines give the impression major news outlets support the Democrat’s presidential bid.

Google achieved and perpetuated its dominance—and strangled rivals—through default deals.

A key feature of the search engine omitted any mention of the former president’s assassination attempt.

“Publicly available” is not the same as “free to use,” the law firm behind the class-action suit argues, seeking to temporarily halt the development of Google’s entire AI structure.

Confronted with high-risk tech suppliers and ‘anti-competitive’ practices, the EU Commission decided to roll back U.S. and Chinese corporate presence.

Google and other tech Leviathans are playing a wait-and-see approach with the EU’s AI Act, whether or not AI technology will run afoul of EU privacy laws.