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  • European Parliament’s Week-Long World Tour: Diplomacy or Vacation?

    European Parliament’s Week-Long World Tour: Diplomacy or Vacation?

    European Parliament Goes Full Globetrotter Mode

    While most of us struggle to coordinate a single work trip, European Parliament members are about to embark on what can only be described as the world’s most ambitious group vacation—er, diplomatic mission—spanning three continents in a single week.

    From March 30 to April 2, MEPs are scattering across the globe like confetti at a wedding, with delegations heading to India, Argentina, Egypt, Poland, Lithuania, Greece, Italy, Portugal, Malta, China, South Korea, Japan, and Germany. That’s right—someone in Brussels clearly discovered bulk airline discounts.

    The Highlights Reel

    In what might be the most significant detail, the delegation to China marks the first parliamentary visit there in eight years. MEPs will be having some stern conversations about those suspiciously cheap parcels flooding European mailboxes and digital regulation breaches. Nothing says “we mean business” like an eight-year gap between visits.

    Meanwhile, other MEPs are tackling equally pressing issues: youth unemployment in Greece, housing crises in Portugal, human rights in Egypt, and—in what sounds like the plot of a feel-good documentary—visiting firefighters and informal settlements in Italy.

    Three brave Legal Affairs Committee members drew the short straw and must “suffer” through visits to Stuttgart and Heidelberg to discuss AI with corporate innovators. Thoughts and prayers for their hardship.

    The Irony

    Back in Brussels? Crickets. The official agenda shows “No event for this day” for plenary sessions, press conferences, and pretty much everything else. Even Parliament President Metsola escaped to Gozo, Malta, presumably for some well-earned Mediterranean sunshine between meetings.

    The weekend? Completely clear. Because even globe-trotting politicians need their rest.

  • EU’s Customs Crackdown Could End the Era of Ultra-Cheap Shopping Apps

    EU’s Customs Crackdown Could End the Era of Ultra-Cheap Shopping Apps

    EU Takes Aim at Your Favorite Cheap Shopping Apps (And Your Wallet Might Feel It)

    The European Parliament just dropped the customs equivalent of a mic, and platforms like Temu, SHEIN, and AliExpress are probably sweating through their budget-priced polyester.

    After what we can only imagine were months of very serious meetings with very expensive coffee, EU negotiators reached a deal Thursday on the biggest customs overhaul since 1968—back when people were still figuring out what the internet would eventually become.

    The Problem: Too Many Tiny Packages

    Here’s the thing: Europeans ordered 5.8 billion parcels from outside the EU last year. That’s nearly 11 packages per person, which explains why your mail carrier gives you that look. These endless streams of individually wrapped items are overwhelming customs officers who are supposed to check if your €3 phone case is secretly a safety hazard.

    The Solution: Make Someone Pay (Spoiler: It’s Complicated)

    Enter the new “handling fee”—a charge for every single item shipped directly from non-EU countries to your doorstep. The European Commission will decide how much, but don’t worry, they promise to “reassess it every two years,” which is bureaucrat-speak for “we’ll see how angry people get.”

    The fee won’t technically come from your pocket directly. Instead, it’ll be paid by whoever’s responsible for customs charges, though let’s be real about where costs eventually end up.

    Platforms Are Now the Adults in the Room

    Under the new rules, those ultra-cheap shopping platforms will be treated as actual importers. That means they’ll need to provide customs data, pay fees, and—here’s the kicker—make sure their products actually comply with EU safety laws. Revolutionary concept, right?

    Companies that repeatedly ignore the rules could face fines up to 6% of their total EU import value. For context, that’s the regulatory equivalent of your parents taking away your allowance, except the allowance is measured in billions.

    A New Customs Authority (Because Why Not?)

    The EU is setting up a shiny new Customs Authority in Lille, France, which will manage a data hub replacing 111—yes, 111—different software systems currently in use. By 2034, everyone will be using the same system, assuming the IT contractors can pull off what would be the greatest software migration miracle since Y2K didn’t end civilization.

    What This Actually Means

    For rule-following businesses, there’s a “trust and check” fast lane. For platforms flooding Europe with questionable products? The party’s getting a lot less fun. And for consumers? Well, those suspiciously cheap deals might get slightly less suspicious and slightly less cheap.

    The deal still needs official approval, but it’s expected to pass faster than a €2 gadget through a sorting facility—at least, faster than it used to.

  • Europe Finally Slides Into China’s DMs After Eight-Year Ghosting

    Europe Finally Slides Into China’s DMs After Eight-Year Ghosting

    Europe Slides into China’s DMs After Eight-Year Ghosting

    After giving China the silent treatment for nearly a decade, European Parliament members are finally accepting the friend request. A nine-member delegation is packing their bags for Beijing and Shanghai this week, and spoiler alert: they’re not just there for the dumplings.

    Led by Anna Cavazzini, chair of the Internal Market and Consumer Protection committee, the MEPs are embarking on their first official visit since 2018. That’s right—eight years. In internet time, that’s basically a geological era.

    The Mission: Digital Detective Work

    The delegation isn’t just sightseeing. They’re on a mission to tackle the elephant in the room—or rather, the 4.6 billion small packages flooding into Europe annually, 91% of which originate from China. Think Shein hauls, Temu bargains, and Alibaba finds that may or may not explode when you plug them in.

    The MEPs plan to have some serious conversations with e-commerce giants about playing by EU rules. Translation: “We love your cheap stuff, but could you maybe ensure it doesn’t catch fire?”

    The Itinerary: From Bureaucrats to Bargain Hunters

    In Beijing, the delegation will meet with Chinese political heavyweights and visit the EU Chamber of Commerce. Then it’s off to Shanghai for chats with Temu and a field trip to Pudong International Airport, where they’ll witness customs controls firsthand. Nothing says “diplomatic mission” quite like watching packages get inspected at an airport.

    The Numbers Don’t Lie

    China is the EU’s third-largest trading partner, but the relationship status is complicated. The EU’s trade deficit with China hit a whopping €305.8 billion in 2024. That’s a lot of unbalanced spreadsheets and uncomfortable economic conversations.

    Adding insult to injury, the EU’s Safety Gate system flagged 4,671 dangerous products in 2025 alone—2,006 from China. Apparently, “buyer beware” has become official policy.

    The Bottom Line

    After eight years of radio silence, Europe is finally ready to talk. The message? Simple: follow our rules, keep consumers safe, and maybe let’s work on that whole “fair competition” thing. Whether China will swipe right on these demands remains to be seen.

  • Europe’s Parliament Becomes a Film Festival as LUX Award Ceremony Celebrates Democracy Through Cinema

    Europe’s Parliament Becomes a Film Festival as LUX Award Ceremony Celebrates Democracy Through Cinema

    Europe’s Got Films: LUX Award Ceremony Rolls Out the Red Carpet

    Mark your calendars, film buffs and democracy enthusiasts! The European Parliament is throwing a party on April 14th, and you’re invited—well, if you’re accredited media, that is. The rest of us mere mortals will have to settle for the webstream.

    The 2026 LUX Audience Award ceremony kicks off at 6 PM in Brussels, where the hemicycle will transform from its usual legislative battleground into a glamorous cinema showcase. Think Oscars, but with more languages and possibly better catering.

    Five films are vying for glory: “Christy,” “Deaf,” “It Was Just an Accident,” “Love Me Tender,” and “Sentimental Value.” The nominees will be available for interviews on the big day—though “Sentimental Value” is playing coy with a “media representative TBC.” Perhaps they’re holding out for someone really special?

    Here’s where democracy gets interesting: the winner isn’t chosen by a panel of stuffy critics in berets. Instead, MEPs and regular folks like you get equal say, rating films on a one-to-five-star system. It’s like Rotten Tomatoes meets parliamentary procedure. You’ve got until April 12th to watch and rate, so get your popcorn ready.

    The award, a joint effort between the European Parliament, European Film Academy, European Commission, and Europa Cinemas network, celebrates films that tackle the big stuff—democracy, human dignity, equality—while still being, you know, actually watchable.

    Last year’s ceremony drew 1,200 attendees, proving that Europeans can get just as excited about cinema as they do about agricultural subsidies. After the winner is announced, there’ll be a press point outside the hemicycle, because nothing says “European values” quite like a good photo op.

    So whether you’re team “Christy” or rooting for “Deaf,” democracy is calling. Just don’t forget to submit your ratings before the deadline—unlike regular elections, this one actually lets you vote from your couch.

  • EU Parliament Rejects Extension of Child Safety Scanning Exemption, Creating Privacy Law Limbo

    EU Parliament Rejects Extension of Child Safety Scanning Exemption, Creating Privacy Law Limbo

    EU Parliament Hits “No Thanks” Button on Privacy Exception Extension

    Well, this is awkward. The European Parliament just voted down a proposal that would have let tech companies continue voluntarily scanning your messages for child abuse material. And by “voted down,” we mean they really voted it down—311 against, 228 for, with 92 MEPs apparently deciding this was a great time to check their phones.

    Here’s the deal: There was this temporary exemption from EU privacy rules that allowed service providers to play digital detective and scan for illegal content. Think of it as a hall pass from the usual “don’t read people’s messages” rules. The European Commission wanted to extend this hall pass while everyone argues about permanent legislation—you know, the kind of bureaucratic process that makes watching paint dry seem thrilling.

    Parliament initially said, “Fine, but only until August 2027, and let’s keep it narrow.” They wanted to make sure nobody got too comfortable with the whole privacy-invasion thing. But then negotiations with the Council went about as well as a chocolate teapot, and no agreement materialized.

    So on Thursday, MEPs pulled the plug. The interim regulation expires April 3rd, 2026, and companies will have to go back to respecting privacy rules like it’s 2019.

    The irony? Parliament has been ready to negotiate the permanent framework since November 2023. The Council finally showed up to the party in November 2025. Classic EU timing—fashionably late doesn’t even begin to cover it.

    Now everyone’s scrambling because the temporary solution is about to become a temporary problem, and the permanent solution is still stuck in that special purgatory reserved for EU legislative processes. At least the bureaucrats will stay busy.

  • EU Gives 416 Casa Workers €1.9M Lifeline After Home Decor Chain Collapses

    EU Gives 416 Casa Workers €1.9M Lifeline After Home Decor Chain Collapses

    Brussels Throws a €1.9 Million Lifeline to Casa Workers (Because Home Decor Shouldn’t Cost You Your Job)

    When Belgian home decor chain Casa International went belly-up in March 2025, 416 workers suddenly found themselves redecorating their own lives instead of other people’s living rooms. But fear not—the EU cavalry has arrived with checkbook in hand.

    The European Parliament just greenlit a €1.9 million rescue package from the European Globalisation Adjustment Fund (because apparently globalization needs its own “oops, sorry” fund). With an overwhelming 575 MEPs voting “yes” and only 48 party poopers saying “no,” the money will help former Casa employees find their footing again.

    Here’s the deal: The EU is picking up 85% of a €2.3 million tab for job-search support, career counseling, and skills training. The Flemish Public Employment Service is covering the remaining 15%—a classic European cost-sharing arrangement that’s more generous than splitting a restaurant bill with your stingy friend.

    Casa International had been wobbling financially for years before finally face-planting into bankruptcy. Now, instead of arranging throw pillows and scented candles, these 416 workers will be arranging their CVs and learning new skills. The program aims to get them back into employment faster than you can say “Swedish minimalist aesthetic.”

    Since its inception, the EGF has helped over 181,000 people across 20 member states with €727 million in support. It’s basically the EU’s way of saying, “We can’t stop companies from going bankrupt, but we can at least help you bounce back.”

    So while Casa’s shelves may be empty, at least these workers’ futures won’t be.

  • EU Gives US Trade Deal the Trust-But-Verify Treatment With Three Emergency Exit Clauses

    EU Gives US Trade Deal the Trust-But-Verify Treatment With Three Emergency Exit Clauses

    EU Plays Hardball with US Trade Deal: “Trust, But Verify (And Set an Expiration Date)”

    The European Parliament just gave the US-EU trade deal the legislative equivalent of a prenup with trust issues. On Thursday, MEPs voted to lower tariffs on American goods—but with more strings attached than a marionette convention.

    The Fine Print Gets Finer

    Sure, the EU agreed to eliminate most tariffs on US industrial goods and roll out the red carpet for American seafood and agricultural products. But here’s the catch: they’ve installed not one, not two, but THREE different “eject buttons.”

    First up is the suspension clause—think of it as the “we can take our toys and go home” provision. If the US slaps on extra tariffs beyond the agreed 15% ceiling, threatens EU territory (yes, that’s actually in there), or engages in “economic coercion,” Brussels can hit pause faster than you can say “trade war.”

    Then there’s the sunrise clause, which is basically the EU saying, “We’ll believe it when we see it.” The new tariffs only kick in if America actually follows through on its promises. Novel concept, right?

    And finally, the sunset clause: this whole arrangement expires on March 31, 2028. It’s like a gym membership that actually ends when you want it to, requiring a full impact assessment before renewal.

    The Safeguard Mechanism

    Just in case all those clauses weren’t enough, there’s also a monitoring system. If US imports surge by 10% and threaten to harm EU industry, the Commission can temporarily suspend the deal. It’s protection with a capital P.

    Rapporteur Bernd Lange summed it up diplomatically: Parliament will only sign off “if the regulation contains very strong and clear safeguards.” Translation: “Show us the money, America, and keep your hands where we can see them.”

    The votes were decisive—417 to 154 for one measure, 437 to 144 for another—proving that when it comes to trade deals, Europe prefers its trust issues documented in triplicate.

    Now MEPs head into negotiations with EU governments, armed with what might be the most cautiously optimistic trade agreement since someone first suggested bartering with Vikings.

  • Japan Finally Ditches Floppy Disks After Decades of Digital Denial

    Japan Finally Ditches Floppy Disks After Decades of Digital Denial

    The Plight of the Forgotten Floppy Disk

    Remember floppy disks? Those square plastic relics that held a whopping 1.44 megabytes of data? Well, they’re not quite ready for the museum yet—at least not in Japan.

    The Japanese government has finally announced it’s phasing out floppy disk requirements from over 1,900 administrative procedures. Yes, you read that right. In 2024, they were still mandating these ancient storage devices for official business. It’s like discovering your neighbor still uses a rotary phone to order pizza.

    Digital Minister Taro Kono declared victory in this technological time warp, though he admits some procedures will stubbornly cling to older media formats. Because apparently, nothing says “efficient government” quite like technology from the Reagan administration.

    Japan isn’t alone in this retro tech struggle. The U.S. Department of Defense only recently began phasing out 8-inch floppy disks from its nuclear weapons systems. That’s right—the same storage technology your parents used to play Oregon Trail was safeguarding America’s nuclear arsenal. Sleep tight!

    Meanwhile, Sony stopped manufacturing floppy disks back in 2011, which means government agencies worldwide have been hoarding these things like doomsday preppers stockpile canned beans.

    The lesson? Sometimes progress isn’t about innovation—it’s simply about catching up to 2005.

  • Europe’s New Banking Rules Put Shareholders on the Hook, Savers in the Safe

    Europe’s New Banking Rules Put Shareholders on the Hook, Savers in the Safe

    Europe’s Got New Banking Rules (And Your Savings Are Invited to the Party)

    Remember when banks failing meant taxpayers footing the bill while executives sailed off into the sunset? Well, the European Parliament just said “not on our watch” and adopted a shiny new rulebook that’s about to make banking crises a lot less painful for everyone except, well, the people who actually caused them.

    The “You Break It, You Buy It” Approach

    In a move that can only be described as refreshingly logical, MEPs decided that when banks go belly-up, shareholders and creditors should be first in line to absorb the damage. Revolutionary, right? It’s almost like making the people who made risky decisions actually face consequences.

    The new rules expand coverage to include smaller and medium-sized banks, because apparently size doesn’t matter when it comes to potential financial chaos. More banks will now fall under “resolution measures” – fancy talk for “we have a plan when things go sideways.”

    Your Money Gets VIP Treatment

    Here’s the good news for regular folks: retail customers and small businesses just got bumped up the priority list. If a bank fails, the deposit guarantee scheme (that’s the industry-funded safety net protecting deposits up to €100,000) gets first dibs on repayment. Retail depositors and SMEs are right behind them in the VIP section.

    But wait, there’s more! If you’re buying a house and have temporarily parked between €500,000 and €2.5 million in your account for the transaction, that’s now protected too. Because nothing says “bad timing” quite like your bank collapsing mid-property purchase.

    The “Bridge the Gap” Lifeline

    The legislation introduces something called the “bridge the gap” mechanism – which sounds like a yoga pose but is actually a way for deposit guarantee funds to help failing banks meet the minimum 8% loss-sharing requirement. Think of it as a financial airbag that deploys before the crash gets too ugly.

    MEPs made sure this mechanism stays accessible for smaller banks, because bureaucratic red tape is the last thing you need when your bank is circling the drain.

    What This Actually Means

    The rules kick in 24 months after publication in the EU’s Official Journal, giving banks plenty of time to panic-prepare. The package covers three legislative files with acronyms that sound like they belong in a spy novel: BRRD, SRMR, and DGSD.

    Bottom line? The EU just made it harder for banks to gamble with other people’s money and expect a taxpayer-funded bailout. It’s about time someone made “too big to fail” sound less like a get-out-of-jail-free card and more like a warning label.

    Now if only they could do something about ATM fees.

  • EU Parliament Delays AI Rules While Banning “Nudifier” Apps in Regulatory Shuffle

    EU Parliament Delays AI Rules While Banning “Nudifier” Apps in Regulatory Shuffle

    EU Parliament Just Banned “Nudifier” Apps (Yes, That’s Actually What They’re Called)

    The European Parliament just voted to pump the brakes on AI regulation—literally. In a move that screams “we need more time to figure this out,” MEPs voted 569-45 to delay certain artificial intelligence rules while simultaneously dropping the hammer on something called “nudifier apps.” Because apparently, that’s where we are as a civilization.

    The Timeline Shuffle

    Here’s the deal: Companies now have until December 2027 to comply with high-risk AI system requirements (think biometrics, law enforcement, and border management). For AI covered by existing safety laws? You’ve got until August 2028. It’s like when your professor extends the deadline because nobody understood the assignment—except the assignment is “don’t let AI destroy society.”

    Meanwhile, anyone creating AI-generated deepfakes has until November 2026 to slap watermarks on their synthetic content. You know, so people can tell whether that video of a politician dancing the Macarena is real or not.

    The Nudifier Crackdown

    But the real headline? Parliament said “absolutely not” to AI systems that create fake intimate images of real people without consent. These so-called “nudifier” apps—yes, someone actually named them that—are now banned unless they have foolproof safeguards preventing misuse. Spoiler alert: they probably don’t.

    Small Businesses Get a Break

    In a rare moment of regulatory mercy, the EU is extending support measures to “small mid-cap enterprises” (SMCs)—basically companies that grew too successful to qualify as small businesses but aren’t quite corporate giants. It’s the legislative equivalent of letting your kid stay on your Netflix account after they get their first job.

    The Parliament also decided that if products are already regulated by sector-specific laws (medical devices, toys, radio equipment), they won’t get slapped with redundant AI rules. Because nothing says “efficient government” like not making companies fill out the same form twice.

    What’s Next?

    Now comes the fun part: negotiations with the Council to hammer out the final law. Translation: months of meetings where people argue about semicolons while AI continues evolving at warp speed.

    This vote is part of the EU’s seventh “omnibus” simplification package—which is bureaucrat-speak for “we made things too complicated, so here’s more legislation to fix it.” The package also includes proposals on data protection and something called “European business wallets,” which sounds either very boring or very dystopian, depending on your perspective.

    One thing’s certain: In the race between AI innovation and AI regulation, regulation just asked for a water break.