Digital markets review: European Commission focuses on artificial intelligence services, Gibson Dunn hires in Brussels

The European Commission has turned its attention to artificial intelligence services as part of a review of the bloc’s digital markets rules. Also in The Briefing, Gibson Dunn & Crutcher has hired lawyers from Baker Botts in Brussels.

Google has warned that divergences between member states could undermine the EU’s Digital Markets Act, flagging a recent German court ruling in a private claim as a potential obstacle to harmonisation across the bloc. The concern illustrates broader friction as national courts and regulators interpret and apply the same digital markets rulebook in different ways, which market participants say could weaken the act’s intended uniform effect.

Also noted in The Briefing for 26 August 2025, Gibson Dunn & Crutcher has expanded its Brussels capacity by hiring lawyers from Baker Botts. The move was reported alongside other sector developments and signals continued lateral recruitment among law firms serving competition and digital markets work in the EU capital.

The European Commission has additionally shifted focus to artificial intelligence services as part of its review of the Digital Markets Act framework. That work places artificial intelligence services within the scope of policymakers´ scrutiny when assessing how digital markets rules operate in practice. These items were summarised in the briefing round-up covering developments on 26 August 2025.

72

Impact Score

Memory architecture is central to autonomous llm agents

Memory design, not just model choice, determines whether autonomous agents can sustain context, learn from experience, and stay reliable over time. A practical framework centers on how information is written, managed, and read across multiple memory types.

OpenAI expands cyber model access through trusted program

OpenAI has introduced GPT-5.4-Cyber as a restricted model for cybersecurity professionals, widening access through its Trusted Access for Cyber program. The release highlights both the defensive value and misuse risks of more capable Artificial Intelligence tools in security work.

Chinese tech firms and Li Fei-Fei push world models forward

Chinese tech companies and Li Fei-Fei’s World Labs are accelerating work on world models, a field focused on helping Artificial Intelligence learn from and interact with physical reality. Alibaba’s new Happy Oyster system targets real-time virtual world creation with more continuous user control.

UK launches Sovereign Artificial Intelligence backing for startups

The UK government has unveiled Sovereign Artificial Intelligence, a state-backed initiative aimed at helping domestic startups build, scale and stay in Britain. The first support includes an equity investment in Callosum and supercomputing access for 6 additional companies working across drug discovery, infrastructure and national security.

Contact Us

Got questions? Use the form to contact us.

Contact Form

Clicking next sends a verification code to your email. After verifying, you can enter your message.