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EU Rethinks Tech Regulations, Aims to Boost Innovation
17 Nov
Summary
- EU policymakers move to scale back and simplify landmark AI and data privacy rules
- Concerns that overregulation is stifling economic growth and leaving EU behind US and China
- Proposed changes aim to encourage AI development and ease data usage for companies

As of November 17, 2025, the European Union is rethinking its aggressive approach to regulating the technology industry over the past decade. Policymakers in Brussels are now moving to scale back and simplify landmark rules for artificial intelligence and data privacy, driven by growing concerns that overregulation is stifling economic growth.
Officials and business leaders across the 27-nation bloc are questioning whether Europe's digital rulebook has gone too far, leaving companies lagging behind the United States and China. The European Commission plans to unveil a "digital package of simplification" this week, which would rewrite key aspects of the GDPR data privacy law and delay parts of the AI Act.
The proposed changes aim to encourage AI development in Europe and make it easier for companies to use data, including sensitive personal information, to build AI systems. Regulators have faced pressure from US tech firms and European businesses to slow the rollout of the AI Act's "high-risk" regulations.
While the EU is not abandoning its tech oversight entirely, the shift in tone could have global repercussions if other countries follow suit. Proponents of regulation fear the changes would weaken one of the few bulwarks against the tech industry, but policymakers argue the moves are necessary to boost Europe's competitiveness in the digital economy.




