Anu Talus, chair of the European Data Protection Board (EDPB), in Seoul, South Korea, on September 15, 2025.Chris Jung/NurPhoto/Getty ImagesA
new Politico report says the European Commission, the EU’s executive arm, plans to relax some of its privacy laws in a bid to cut red tape and boost AI-driven economic growth.
Among the laws to be revised: the all-encompassing GDPR, or General Data Protection Regulation, which took effect in 2018 and is familiar turf for every marketer and software engineer.
Among the changes, according to the report: Exceptions for AI companies that would allow them to “legally process special categories of data to train and operate their tech,” such as religion or ethnicity, and a reframing of “personal data” to exclude pseudonymized data.
Changing today’s laws won’t be easy. On the one hand, consumer protection laws are a hallmark of the region. On the other hand, business leaders are growing increasingly concerned that they won’t be competitive on the global stage with such restrictive regulations.
There are good reasons to fret. Google, Meta, Microsoft’s LinkedIn, and Elon Musk’s X have all delayed, adjusted, or flat-out refused to launch AI products because of the bloc’s laws. And several executives—some European—have made their concerns clear.
“There’s a whole range of areas where I think the risks are minimal and we should let innovation run there,” Amazon CTO Werner Vogels
told CNN last year, adding: “We need to make sure that innovation continues to happen and that the innovation doesn’t just come outside Europe. We already have a very long history in Europe of underinvesting in R&D.”
—AN