Europe's Digital Sovereignty: Is the Political Will Ever Coming? Eight years ago, Europe declared digital sovereignty a priority, but is it now out of reach?
Four Responses on the Future of Internet Governance Submitted as part of the WSIS+20 review process, which marks twenty years since the original World Summit on the Information Society.
Big Tech Redefined the Open Internet to Serve Its Own Interests Big Tech companies have redefined terms like “openness” and “free expression” to support business models built on centralization and data monetization.
The UK Online Safety Act: Ofcom’s Age Checks Raise Concerns New UK rules require “highly effective” age checks for adult content online, but the proposed methods risk undermining privacy, excluding vulnerable users, and expanding surveillance infrastructure.
If It Breaks Wikipedia, It’s Probably Bad Policy One Simple Test to Try Before Regulating the Internet.
The UK Struggles to Balance AI Innovation and Creative Protection The UK, a global hub for both AI and the arts, struggles to balance tech innovation and protecting a creative sector increasingly threatened by AI trained on copyrighted works.
The Winners of Tariff Diplomacy: U.S. Tech Companies By Burcu Kilic. Adapted from a version originally published in the Carr-Ryan Center for Human Rights’ "Trump’s First 100 Days in Office" report and published in our newsletter. For more insights and essays from IX contributors, make sure to subscribe. Tech Companies Push to Reframe Reinstated Tariffs