Cynthia Kroet

Journalist

Belgium

Senior EU Policy Reporter, Technology at Euronews.

Formerly with MLex and Politico in Brussels.

Portfolio
Mlexmarketinsight
Businesses' Covid-19 customer records watched closely by EU data watchdogs

Restaurants and bars that have been ordered to keep registers with customers' personal data to track Covid-19 infections are being closely monitored by data-protection authorities in Germany, Belgium and the UK. Although the regulators' focus will be on advising businesses on their compliance with the EU's General Data Protection Regulation, and no fines have been issued yet, they can carry out audits based on consumers' complaints.

Mlexmarketinsight
Big Tech might see more enforcement action as EU's GDPR turns two

As the EU marks the second anniversary of the General Data Protection Regulation - its strict data-protection rules - large US tech companies that have so far mainly avoided significant fines should prepare for closer regulatory enforcement in the months ahead.

Mlexmarketinsight
Match Group's Twoo fined in Belgium for GDPR breach

Twoo, a Match Group-owned, Belgian-based platform, has been fined 50,000 euros in Belgium for breaching the EU's data-protection rules. Match Group operates several well-known dating applications including Tinder, Hinge and OKCupid. The national data-protection authority announced the fine yesterday without naming the company at fault, referring to it only as a "global social network."

Mlexmarketinsight
02/13/2020
Companies' direct-marketing practices scrutinized by Finnish data-protection authority

Companies' direct-marketing practices have come under scrutiny in Finland to check their compliance with the EU's General Data Protection Regulation, the country's deputy data-protection ombudsman has told MLex. "We investigate all the [data protection] complaints we receive. This means that we have many ongoing and parallel investigations right now.

Mlexmarketinsight
01/16/2020
EU companies await commission's digital plans in first half of 2020

EU telecom operators and tech companies expect the new European Commission, which took office in December, to put forward some of its digital plans in coming weeks, including rules on artificial intelligence. At the same time, they still await clarity on some of the outstanding files from the previous Juncker commission, which EU institutions and national governments were unable to find agreement on.

Mlexmarketinsight
08/14/2019
Europe effort to enact ethical AI rules could lay groundwork for global standard

Scour a big tech company dabbling in artificial intelligence and chances are it already has an ethics guidelines document somewhere on the company server. The question looming before all manner of industries whose world artificial intelligence is positioned to permanently transform - is whether today's proliferating set of voluntary, non-binding ethics rules will become cold, hard law.

Mlexmarketinsight
04/24/2019
Huawei's EU obstacles stem from regulatory uncertainty back home

Huawei's battle for acceptance in Europe can be traced back to regulatory uncertainty in an unexpected place - its home market of China. The Chinese telecom company has already been barred from participating in the rollout of fifth-generation mobile Internet in the US and Australia due to cybersecurity fears.

Mlexmarketinsight
04/03/2019
US-EU-Japan data flows could be eased further under Japanese proposal

Companies that transfer data between the US, EU and Japan could see a further alignment of the three data-protection regimes later this year, MLex has learned. Japan will set out plans for a "data security" pact between the three jurisdictions at its next summit with the EU, according to meeting documents seen by MLex.

POLITICO
08/23/2017
Belgium's problem: Too many jobs (for politicians)

When a scandal over politicians' side jobs forced one of Belgium's major parties from power, it shocked the country's political establishment. But the revelations came as no surprise to Christophe Van Gheluwe, a 41-year-old IT expert from Brussels.

POLITICO
06/06/2017
Ayaan Hirsi Ali: Tackle Islam or face civil war

A decade ago, when Ayaan Hirsi Ali was forced to leave her adopted homeland of the Netherlands, a former colleague by the name of Geert Wilders had just launched his own, far-right political party.