The Morning After: European policymakers scale back AI and privacy laws

Happy Friday! As the annual tech discount chaos of Black Friday approaches (good deal here and here and several more here), European policymakers have proposed easing some of the EU’s strictest regulations on artificial intelligence and data privacy. The move aims to remove roadblocks for tech companies and stimulate business growth in the region, potentially marking a major pivot away from the bloc’s reputation as the industry’s toughest regulator.

Changes would allow AI companies to access shared personal data to train their models, while also overhauling GDPR cookie rules. Instead of constant pop-ups, users could set preferences once in their browser and give consent with a single click. (OK, I’m onboard with that.)

Strict rules for “high-risk” AI applications, originally set for next summer, may be delayed until proper support tools are in place. Critics are warning this could be seen as Europe bowing to pressure from Big Tech and political shifts in the US. The proposal now heads to the European Parliament.

— Mat Smith

Get Engadget’s newsletter delivered direct to your inbox. Subscribe right here!

  • Google’s new Gemini 3 model arrives in AI Mode and the Gemini app

  • Authorities probe Holocaust denial responses from X’s Grok

  • Android Quick Share now works with Apple’s AirDrop feature on Pixel 10 phones

  • Disney+ may start hosting user-generated AI videos

  • Cloudflare outage was not caused by a cyberattack

  • 2025 Porsche Macan Electric review: The obvious choice when budget allows

TMA
FoloToy

A company selling AI-enabled toys suspended sales after a consumer safety report found few restrictions on what its toys would say. The report, by the US Public Interest Research Group Education Fund, found FoloToy’s products would discuss everything from sexually explicit topics, like BDSM, to “advice on where a child can find matches or knives.” The toys all appear to use OpenAI’s GPT-4o model to respond naturally to children’s questions and comments. Missing from that setup was apparently hard limits on subjects the toys would respond to.

FoloToy has opted to suspend sales of its products while it conducts “a company-wide, end-to-end safety audit across all products.”

Continue reading.

xAI is once again nuking a bunch of posts from Grok on X after the chatbot made a series of outrageous claims. The company isn’t only cleaning up a bunch of pro-Hitler posts but also a bout of cringe-inducing sycophantic praise for its CEO, Elon Musk. Over the last couple of days, Grok began offering extremely over-the-top opinions about Musk. The bot claimed Musk is the “undisputed pinnacle of holistic fitness” and that he is fitter than LeBron James (hah!). It also said he is smarter than Einstein and would win a fight against Mike Tyson.

Musk is blaming “adversarial prompting” for Grok going off the rails. “Earlier today, Grok was unfortunately manipulated by adversarial prompting into saying absurdly positive things about me,” he wrote. He did not explain how straightforward questions could be considered “adversarial.”

Continue reading.

TMA
Engadget

Two years ago, Ooni attempted the indoor pizza-making party with the Volt 12. It had its flaws, but there were enough redeeming features (and interest) to warrant a follow up. The Volt 2 ($699) is a complete overhaul, with a slicker design, which is slightly smaller than the first generation. It’s also cheaper than the original. Read on for the full review.

Continue reading.

The Chrono Divide project (via PC Gamer) lets you play the 2000 RTS Red Alert 2 in Chrome, Edge or Safari. It even works in mobile browsers. It supports cross-platform multiplayer using all the original maps. Red Alert 2’s single-player campaign modes are still a work in progress for now. The project’s website said: “The end-goal is reaching feature parity with the original vanilla Red Alert 2 engine.”

Continue reading.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/general/the-morning-after-engadget-newsletter-121535805.html?src=rss

Read more @ Engadget

Latest posts

There’s a sneaky way to watch A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms for FREE

HBO’s A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms – the Game of Thrones spin-off based on George R.R. Martin’s beloved Tales of Dunk and Egg...

Better than Black Friday: the Apple Watch SE 3 at its lowest Aussie price of just AU$337 is fantastic value for a smartwatch

If you've been waiting for an attractive Apple Watch SE 3 discount to kick off 2026, then you’re in luck as we've finally found...

You need to listen to the cosmic horror-comedy podcast Welcome to Night Vale

It's relatively rare for a podcast to last 14 years, especially a fiction one. In fact, as far as I can tell, Welcome to...

NYT Connections hints and answers for Monday, January 19 (game #953)

Looking for a different day?A new NYT Connections puzzle appears at midnight each day for your time zone – which means that some people...

NYT Strands hints and answers for Monday, January 19 (game #687)

Looking for a different day?A new NYT Strands puzzle appears at midnight each day for your time zone – which means that some people...

Quordle hints and answers for Monday, January 19 (game #1456)

Looking for a different day?A new Quordle puzzle appears at midnight each day for your time zone – which means that some people are...

The outstanding Roborock Saros 10R just got even better — here are 3 ways the Saros 20 improves on its predecessor

Roborock announced a few new robot vacuums at CES 2026, including one that has leggy stilts that mean it can just lift itself up...

The memory shortage reaches a ridiculous new high – thieves hit South Korean design office, apparently just to steal DDR5 memory

High-capacity DDR5 memory prices surged sharply, creating new theft targetsThieves in South Korea only stoles DDR5 modules, ignoring all other office hardware32GB DDR5-5600 kits...

World internet speed record of 430,000Gbps achieved using bog-standard optic fiber cables, fast enough to download Battlefield 6 in one millisecond — new tech...

NICT researchers achieved 430Tbps over conventional optical fiberNew approach used nearly 20% less overall transmission bandwidthMultiple modes transmitted simultaneously in the O-band and ESCL...

How to watch Australian Open 2026 Tennis on 9Now — it’s *FREE*

The 2026 Australian Open has officially begun! The first major Grand Slam of the tennis calendar has kicked off its fortnight-long stint in Melbourne's...