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Brignone wins second Milan-Cortina gold as Klaebo claims record ninth Olympic crown
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Morikawa wins at Pebble Beach despite Scheffler heroics
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Germany's Hase and Volodin tango to Olympic pairs figure skating lead
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Rayo thrash Atletico who 'deserved to lose' as Betis cut gap
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Napoli salvage point after Malen twice puts Roma ahead
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Lyon down Nice to boost Ligue 1 title bid with 13th straight win
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LeBron still unclear on NBA future: 'I have no idea'
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Shelton battles back from brink to beat Fritz, take Dallas crown
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Great Britain celebrate best-ever Winter Olympics
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Brignone wins second Milan-Cortina gold as Klaebo claims record ninth
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Arteta concerned over Arsenal's mounting injury list
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In fuel-starved Cuba, the e-tricycle is king
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Shaidorov still spinning after outshining Malinin for Olympic gold
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Late Gruda goal grabs Leipzig draw versus Wolfsburg
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'Ultra-left' blamed for youth's killing that shocked France
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Canada wrap up perfect Olympic ice hockey preliminary campaign
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Historical queer film 'Rose' shown at Berlin with call to action
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Wales' Tandy tips hat to France after Six Nations hammering
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Quadruple chasing Arsenal rout Wigan to reach FA Cup fifth round
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2026 S-Class starry facelift
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What they said as India beat Pakistan at T20 World Cup - reaction
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Away-day blues: England count cost of Scotland Six Nations defeat
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'Wuthering Heights' debuts atop North America box office
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Rayo thrash Atletico who 'deserved to lose'
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Kok beats Leerdam in Olympic rematch of Dutch speed skaters
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India rout bitter rivals Pakistan by 61 runs at T20 World Cup
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France run rampant to thrash sorry Wales 54-12 in Six Nations
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Rio to kick off Carnival parade with ode to Lula in election year
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Britain celebrate first-ever Olympic gold on snow after snowboard win
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Third time lucky as De Minaur finally wins in Rotterdam
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Leeds survive Birmingham scare to reach FA Cup fifth round
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Klaebo wins record ninth Winter Olympics gold medal
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Fan frenzy as India–Pakistan clash in T20 World Cup
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French 'Free Jazz' pioneer Portal dies aged 90
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China's freeski star Gu says Olympics scheduling 'unfair'
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Kishan hits quickfire 77 as India make 175-7 in Pakistan showdown
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Shiffrin takes positives after falling short in Olympic giant slalom
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Oh! Calcutta! -- how did England lose to Scotland in Six Nations?
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Brignone strikes Olympic gold again as Klaebo becomes first to win nine
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Marseille sporting director Benatia quits club
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History-maker Brignone completes Olympic fairy tale as Shiffrin's medal misery continues
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Brignone claims second Olympic gold, Shiffrin misses podium
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Evans wins Rally Sweden to top championship standings
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No handshake between India, Pakistan captains before T20 World Cup clash
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French 'ultra-left' behind killing of right-wing youth: justice minister
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Forest appoint Pereira as fourth boss this season
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Norwegian cross-country skier Klaebo wins a Winter Olympics record ninth gold
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'King of the Moguls' Kingsbury bows out on top with Olympic dual moguls gold
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Hiam Abbass says 'cinema is a political act' after Berlin row
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'Imposter' Nef shooting for double Olympic gold
Meta and Spotify blast EU decisions on AI
A group of companies including Meta and Spotify blasted the European Union Thursday for its "fragmented and inconsistent" decision-making on data privacy and artificial intelligence (AI).
The firms along with several researchers and industry bodies signed an open letter claiming that Europe was already becoming less competitive and risked falling further behind in the age of AI.
The signatories called for "harmonised, consistent, quick and clear decisions" from data privacy regulators to "enable European data to be used in AI training for the benefit of Europeans".
The letter takes issue with recent decisions under the 2018 general data protection regulation (GDPR).
Meta, which owns Facebook, WhatsApp and Instagram, recently halted plans to harvest data from European users to train its AI models after pressure from privacy regulators.
"In recent times, regulatory decision making has become fragmented and unpredictable, while interventions by the European Data Protection Authorities have created huge uncertainty about what kinds of data can be used to train AI models," said the letter.
A European Commission spokesperson said at the time that all companies in the EU were expected to abide by data privacy rules.
Meta has faced record fines for breaching the privacy of users, including a single penalty of more than one billion euros under GDPR.
As well as data privacy rules, Europe became the first regional bloc to frame major legislation aiming to stop abuses of the technology -- its AI Act coming into force earlier this year.
Meta and other tech giants have increasingly delayed products for the European market, claiming they were seeking legal clarity.
Meta delayed the EU-wide release of its Twitter alternative Threads by several months last year.
Google has similarly held back the release of AI tools in the EU.
Y.Nakamura--AMWN