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The European Commission plans to impose a fine of 500 million euros on Apple for violating competition rules in the music streaming services sector. This is the result of an antitrust investigation that examined whether the company favored its own services at the expense of competition.

Polish startup ElevenLabs among the so-called unicorns, Elon Musk's visit to Poland, and further copyright infringements by generative AI. What else have we lived through in the past week?

Many indications suggest that the year 2024 will be crucial for the further development of generative AI models trained on publicly available materials. Subsequent courts will decide whether and to what extent this technology infringes copyright.

The second quarter of 2024 will bring significant changes to the cryptocurrency market. The responsibility for supervising this sector will be taken over by the Financial Supervision Authority (KNF), which will receive expanded powers, including the ability to supervise and impose penalties.

In Poland, from January 2024, changes have been made to the regulations regarding unregistered business activity. Taxpayers can conduct such activity, provided that the monthly income from it does not exceed 75% of the minimum wage.

The current requirement to obtain consent for cookies has caused an avalanche of banners on most websites, which has become burdensome for internet users. The European Union is working on new regulations that are intended to make the process of rejecting them even easier for users.

Google has reached a preliminary settlement in another class action lawsuit. This time, the company is accused of tracking users in incognito mode, for which it faces a payout of up to 5 billion dollars in damages. How will the process unfold further?

On January 1, 2024, the so-called minimum tax came into effect - a new fee covering companies or capital groups, which will show losses or low profitability in the annual settlement.

Stephen Thaler lost in the British Supreme Court the case for obtaining patents for inventions created by his artificial intelligence system. This is the first such case in the UK, which also sheds light on the issue of whether AI can have patent rights.

After fifteen months of document verification by British and EU competition authorities, Figma and Adobe finally abandon merger plans. The companies no longer see a chance of reaching an agreement with regulators.