Regulator calls for big tech privacy cases to be handled by EU Watchdog
John E. Kaye
- Published
- Home, News, Technology


Cross-border Big Tech privacy cases should be handled by the EU watchdog rather than national agencies, the head of the bloc’s data protection watchdog has said, as he lamented the poor enforcement of landmark rules adopted four years ago. The rules known as the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) have drawn criticism over the costs of compliance and long-running investigations with few decisions.
The Irish regulator, which has oversight of Google, Meta, Apple, Microsoft and Twitter, has in particular come under fire for its slow pace of enforcement. One solution could be to hand over big cases to the European Data Protection Board (EDPB) whose members are national privacy regulators and the European Data Protection Supervisor (EDPS) which oversees EU institutions, EDPS head Wojciech Wiewiorowski said.

“I myself share views of those who believe we still do not see sufficient enforcement, in particular against Big Tech,” he told a conference. “At a certain moment, a pan-European data protection enforcement model is going to be a necessary step to ensure real and consistent high-level protection of fundamental rights to data protection and privacy across the European Union,” Wiewiorowski said. He said this could mean that key investigations, based on a certain threshold, would be done at a central level, in essence the EDPB, and subject to direct scrutiny of Europe’s top court.
Empowering the EDPB to take on Big Tech cases directly would mean changing GDPR rules, a move which the European Commission is unlikely to do under the current leadership because of insufficient time, a European Commission official told Reuters.
TOP STORIES
-
Claude maker Anthropic valued at nearly $1tn after record AI funding round -
Felled Sycamore Gap tree ‘to speak again’ in UK national memorial -
NASA to send rabbit-like drones to scout site for first Moon base -
Apollo, Artemis, Ali and Live Aid satellite station set for new Moon role in £37m deal -
BrewDog founder pours free shares into new beer firm -
Inside gaming billionaire Gabe Newell’s next-level gigayacht -
Machiavell-AI? Autonomous artificial intelligence systems ‘could become dangerously manipulative’, experts warn -
Prague targets high-value business travellers after global congress ranking boost -
eBay rejects GameStop bid -
AI EVERYTHING KENYA X GITEX KENYA summit launches in Nairobi as East Africa accelerates AI ambitions -
Xpeng eyes European factory as VW seeks to offload spare capacity -
This hidden Greek beach has just been named the best in Europe -
Siemens expands rail technology arm with Italian deal -
New routes put Europe’s rail revival back on track -
Parked electric cars could help power island ferries in German trial -
UK billionaire count falls as wealthy quit Britain, Sunday Times Rich List shows -
Macron unveils £20bn Africa push as France strikes new Kenya deals -
Italy draws global tech investors as Europe races to build its own champions -
Opel turns to Chinese EV technology for new European-built SUV -
Japan and Luxembourg deepen space ties as lunar race gathers pace -
Meet the Earth Prize-winning teenager tackling the world’s microplastic crisis -
Starmer fights for future as he moves to nationalise British Steel -
Bluebird returns to Coniston 59 years after Campbell’s fatal crash -
Pentagon reopens Moon mystery in huge UFO files release -
De Niro's Nobu heads to the country with first rural hotel in Rutland



























