The European Union’s single market connects roughly 450 million consumers across 24 official languages. For businesses trading across borders, translation is not an afterthought. It is infrastructure. And in 2026, artificial intelligence has made that infrastructure faster and cheaper than ever.
— last modified 04 November 2010 The European Commission has proposed safety standards for disposing spent fuel and radioactive waste from nuclear power plants as well as from medicine or…
By Leo GasteenA Greek law allowing minor shareholders of television companies to be penalised for improper content violates European Union principles, the European Court of Justice (ECJ) ruled. The ruling of 25 October…
By Leo GasteenThe European Court of Justice (ECJ) has upheld a fine of EUR 12.6 million originally imposed by the Commission in 2003 for anti-competitive behaviour in the German internal…
— last modified 21 October 2010 When problems hit one bank, they can spread to the whole financial sector and well beyond the borders of any one country. The financial…
— last modified 26 April 2012 In the context of the modernisation of the European Public procurement Directives, adopted in December 2011, the European Commission has proposed to make e-procurement…
— last modified 14 October 2010 The “Eurovignette” Directive on charging heavy goods vehicles for the use of infrastructure was originally adopted in 1999. It provides a framework for the…









