A Charlottesville-based nonprofit group that pushes for sustainable practices and policies held an award ceremony earlier this month honoring the area’s businesses, organizations and individuals doing that work at the
European Union (EU) legislators, like most of the world, are troubled about the increasing number and severity of cybersecurity incidents. However, unlike most of the world, which is taking a flexible, adaptive Zero Trust Model approach of continuous controls for cyberdefense, the EU government is pursuing a vastly expanded version of the failed Common Criteria certification model coupled with regulatory extremism and exceptionalism strategies.
The proposed new European Union (EU) Artificial Intelligence Act has been extolled in the media as a bold action by a major legislative body against the perceived dangers of emerging new computer technology. The action presently consists of an initial proposal for a Regulation with annexes from 2021, plus recent Amendments adopted on 14 June. This regulatory behemoth exists entwined among a multitude of other recent EU major regulations.
Peace and Justice Advocate and Chief Executive CODE Hamzat Lawal, made the call at a religious dialogue tagged “Faith Talk: We Are One”, organised by Lawal in Abuja.