The Digital Omnibus is more than it seems: a sweeping EU effort to simplify digital law that’s also concentrating power in Brussels. Explore how this regulatory overhaul could reshape Europe’s digital landscape.
The Digital Omnibus promises to streamline EU digital regulation and slash compliance costs, but unresolved legal conflicts and data dilemmas threaten Europe’s tech ambitions. Netcrook investigates the real stakes for innovation and rights.
The Digital Omnibus promises a seismic shift in Europe’s approach to data, AI, and cybersecurity—but fierce debate over privacy, rights, and innovation threatens to reshape the outcome. Here’s what’s really happening behind the scenes.
The EU’s Digital Omnibus aims to simplify digital regulation, but privacy authorities warn it could erode the GDPR’s core protections. Is the backbone of European data privacy at risk?
The EU Digital Omnibus package has quietly eliminated important P2B and DGA protections, sparking debate about whether regulatory simplification is coming at the cost of privacy and fairness online.
As the EU pushes to streamline digital rules, Italy’s cybersecurity director Bruno Frattasi warns that simplification must not come at the expense of national security, highlighting risks in the proposed centralization of incident reporting and AI oversight.
The EU’s AI Act is mired in confusion as Digital Omnibus reforms delay clear rules and deadlines. Businesses and regulators are left in suspense, facing mounting costs and uncertainty over high-risk AI compliance.
As the EU debates the sweeping Digital Omnibus, privacy watchdogs sound alarm bells over proposed changes to personal data definitions and regulatory powers—potentially reshaping the very framework of data rights in Europe.
As the EU pushes for a sweeping Digital Omnibus to streamline digital laws, privacy watchdogs EDPB and EDPS issue a joint warning: simplification must not erode the fundamental privacy protections enshrined in the GDPR.
The Digital Omnibus 2025 transforms digital consent into a technical signal, making your choices persistent and machine-readable. But as platforms and standards bodies take center stage, who truly controls your privacy?