Welcome to Outside the Box: Innovative Ideas from CEPS Ideas Lab, the podcast series that brings you the most forward-thinking ideas from CEPS' annual Ideas Lab event.
Every year, CEPS’ Ideas Lab brings together a diverse group of policymakers, experts, and thought leaders to explore innovative solutions to some of the world’s most pressing challenges. From digital sovereignty and AI to climate change, energy transition, and sustainable trade, each episode dives into the ideas that are being debated, discussed, and developed at ideas Lab to address the complex issues facing our global society.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Welcome to Outside the Box: Innovative Ideas from CEPS Ideas Lab, the podcast series that brings you the most forward-thinking ideas from CEPS' annual Ideas Lab event.
Every year, CEPS’ Ideas Lab brings together a diverse group of policymakers, experts, and thought leaders to explore innovative solutions to some of the world’s most pressing challenges. From digital sovereignty and AI to climate change, energy transition, and sustainable trade, each episode dives into the ideas that are being debated, discussed, and developed at ideas Lab to address the complex issues facing our global society.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

The EU’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) was initially heralded as a ground-breaking legal framework for data privacy. However, in its current form and application, it has become a roadblock to digital progress, stifling innovation, impeding AI development and hampering essential research. A review of the GDPR is now overdue, with the current rules in place since 2018.
If Europe wants to remain competitive in an increasingly data-driven world, some immediate reforms to the GDPR are essential. We need urgent measures to resolve access issues to datasets, implement a risk-based approach to regulation and create a harmonised and simplified legal framework that promotes both privacy and innovation.
In the digital age, data is the currency of progress. Without access to datasets, AI models cannot be trained, medical research cannot advance and businesses cannot operate efficiently. Yet under the GDPR’s stringent and often inconsistent enforcement, accessing, processing and sharing data has become an administrative nightmare. The regulation’s complexity, combined with varied national interpretations, has led to a bureaucratic bottleneck that stymies economic growth and research advancements.
That’s why it’s time for a pragmatic revision that balances protecting personal information with the need to leverage data for innovation and societal benefit.
Watch more here
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.