The ubiquity of artificial intelligence systems in modern organizations all but guarantees that regulators or the parties they oversee will make use of learning algorithms or novel techniques to analyze data in the process of defining, implementing, or complying with regulatory requirements.
Algeria and Egypt pressed China’s telecom national champion Huawei for more value-added manufacturing and technology transfers. The company responded, but it ultimately improved its brand image without engaging in meaningful capacity building.
There may be merit in first creating the law, then addressing other concerns later.
In some ways Estonia, in 2007, was the starting point where it became a topic for real global attention.
Professor Duncan Hollis of Temple Law explains the development of international cyberspace law, starting with the preliminary questions of whether and how existing international laws apply.
Washington also needs smarter tech policy that addresses platforms’ roles in polarization and inequality.
Riskier launch operations may hasten the danger of orbital debris.
Join Carnegie for a conversation on how governments in Africa and Europe are navigating the opportunities and risks of cloud dependence, the complex technology policy landscape, and intersection between the private and public sectors.
Join Carnegie for a timely discussion about what these trends mean for the current geopolitical landscape and what citizens can do to evade authoritarian controls and regain access to the World Wide Web.
As governments find more effective ways to carry out internet shutdowns, citizens and democracies need more effective ways to combat them.