What GDPR Compliance Looks Like for US Companies in 2026 — And What Smart Marketers Are Doing About It
For years, the standard American business response to GDPR was some version of: "That's a European thing. We're fine." In 2026, that position is no longer defensible. With over 20 US state privacy laws in effect, coordinated enforcement sweeps targeting marketing-specific violations, and cumulative GDPR fines surpassing $5.88 billion globally, data privacy compliance has become a core operational requirement — not a legal department checkbox. Here's what it actually looks like, what regulators are actively targeting, and what smart companies are doing to stay ahead of it.
ChatGPT Quietly Removed Image Titles From Its Generator — and It's a Bigger ADA Problem Than Anyone Is Talking About
ChatGPT's image generator used to do something small but important: it gave every generated image a descriptive title. Not perfect alt text by any standard, but a functional label — a starting point that content creators could use when deploying AI-generated images on websites, in emails, and across social media. That title is gone now. ChatGPT generates the image, displays it, and offers it for download with no descriptive text, no meaningful file name, and nothing that assistive technology can use to communicate the image's content to a user who cannot see it. For most sighted users, this change is nearly invisible. For users who rely on screen readers, and for every business deploying AI-generated images without alt text on their own digital properties, it is a meaningful regression in accessibility with real legal implications under the ADA. Here's what changed, why it matters, and what businesses using AI image generation need to do about it right now.