The Earl Of Erroll, Independent Crossbench Peer at the House of Lords, has urged the public sector to take note of changing EU laws surrounding online business.
The two will cooperate to strengthen "the understanding, research and development" of the next-generation breed of superfast networks.
The lawsuit will be heard on Thursday in Brussels, reports The Guardian.
European privacy regulators plan to take matters into their own hands inside three months if no back up comes forward, reports Reuters.
Only 21% of small and medium-sized enterprises are confident they will comply with Brussels' upcoming regulations, including the GDPR, set to be finalised in the Spring 2016.
Google has been criticised for removing a BBC article from its search results under the “right to be forgotten” ruling by the very people who brought in the ruling – the European Commission.
Digital technologies are borderless in nature, so it makes no sense for the European Union to impose them, said the European Commission (EC).
European Commissioner for Digital Economy and Society, Günther Hermann Oettinger, is set to meet with national ministers next Friday to try and end the deadlock between national ministers and MEPs on the subject of net neutrality.
Google has officially been accused of abusing its position as the dominant search engine in Europe.
5G online connectivity could be coming sooner rather than later after the European Union and Japan agreed to collaborate on developing the technology.
The European Parliament is set to decide whether or not technology manufacturers must be aware of where their minerals come from.
After years of hard negotiations, European lawmakers have finally agreed to scrap roaming charges in the Union.
The European Youth Award (EYA) has announced it is seeking young entrepreneurs engaged in innovative digital projects aimed at solving Europe's social challenges.
Facebook has rejected a report from the Centre of Interdisciplinary Law and ICT at the University of Leuven in Belgium, claiming the social network’s privacy policy violates European Union laws.
Social media giant facing a great deal of heat in the European Union, where many countries are concerned with the ways in which the site collects data and in how it uses cookies to track users.
In response to the whole “right to be forgotten” episode which erupted this week following an EU court ruling, Google is apparently readying an online tool to deal with link takedown requests.
European Commissioner for Competition Margrethe Vestager says she still has the company in her sights.
Google has accidentally revealed data relating to so-called right to be forgotten requests.
Following the EU ruling on the “right to be forgotten”, Google has set up an online form to allow European citizens to request removal of “irrelevant” links from its search engine.
On Friday, when Google’s “Search removal request under European Data Protection law” form went live, the search engine received an avalanche of removal requests.
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