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IViR Lecture Series:

AI, Copyright and Collective Licensing
by Rita Matulionyte


16 June 2026
PhD defence:

Building normative diversity into algorithmic news recommendations
by Sanne Vrijenhoek

1 July 2026
Conference:

2026 Annual Conference of the Society for Economic Research on Copyright Issues

6 & 7 July 2026

IViR Summer Courses 2026:

International Copyright
Law & Policy
European Platform Regulation

Latest News

5 June, 2026

‘Experiment without becoming lazy’- Teacher Story: Ot van Daalen

Interview
Ot van Daalen

When does the use of AI add value, and when does it come at the expense of something valuable? In conversation with Ot van Daalen, a lecturer in Information Law and attorney, the TLC-FdR discusses the value of AI. A little sneak peek: experiment! Sometimes with success, sometimes with the conclusion that it isn’t the right path after all.

4 June, 2026

Introducing our new visiting researcher: Daniel Hauck

Staff

IViR is pleased to introduce our new visiting researcher Daniel Hauck. Daniel is a PhD candidate in law at the University of Hagen. Currently, Daniel is conducting research on content moderation and how online platforms exercise power and impose censorship. He is undertaking a three-month visiting period at IViR.

29 May, 2026

Winner Announcement for the IViR “Science Fiction & Information Law” Writing Competition

News

The Award Ceremony for the 4th edition of the IViR “Science Fiction & Information Law” Writing Competition was held on Thursday, 21 May, at CPDP in Brussels. A wonderful occasion to explore this edition’s theme, “The Technologised Future of Truth”, and honour the most valuable contributions.

See all news

Upcoming events

June 12, 2026

VMC Studiemiddag: Openbaarmaking van oorlogsarchieven en verslaggeving in conflictgebieden

Uitdagingen bij waarheidsvinding in het licht van informatievrijheid

Amsterdam, The Netherlandshttps://www.ivir.nl/publicaties/…
June 16, 2026

IViR Lecture Series: AI, Copyright and Collective Licensing: Perspectives from Australia

  • IViR Lunch Lecture
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
June 17 - 19, 2026

TILTing Perspectives 2026

Between Values and Innovation: Tech Governance in a Multicentric World

Tilburg, The Netherlandshttps://www.tilburguniversity.ed…
June 17 - 19, 2026

ALAI Congress 2026: Copyright and Free Expression in the Age of Algorithms

The Hague, The Netherlandshttps://alai2026.org/
June 17, 2026

Copyright’s Next Generation Event

The Hague, The Netherlandshttps://alai2026.org/#nextgen
June 25 - 28, 2026

ACM Conference on Fairness, Accountability, and Transparency (FAccT) 2026

Montreal, CanadaFAccT 2026 in Monréal
See all events

Latest publications

Annotatie bij Hof van Justitie van de Europese Unie 4 december 2025 (Mio / Galleri Mikael & Thomas Asplund Aktiebolag en USM U. Schärer Söhne / Konektra) download

Hugenholtz, P.B.
Nederlandse Jurisprudentie, iss. : 18, num: 155, pp: 3364-3367, 2026
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Links

  • Annotatie_NJ_2026_155

Copyright, Neighbouring rights, reproductierecht

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New IViR Study: Towards a Digital Knowledge Act – Mapping Policy Options to Mitigate Legal Risks for Teaching, Learning and Research external link

Valk, E.G., Szkalej, K. & Senftleben, M.
Kluwer Copyright Blog, 2026
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Links

  • https://legalblogs.wolterskluwer.com/copyright-blog/new-ivir-study-towards-a-digital-knowledge-act-mapping-policy-options-to-mitigate-legal-risks-for-teaching-learning-and-research/

Copyright

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A Blind Spot at the Heart of EU Copyright and AI Policymaking? external link

Keller, P.
Kluwer Copyright Blog, 2026
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Links

  • https://legalblogs.wolterskluwer.com/copyright-blog/a-blind-spot-at-the-heart-of-eu-copyright-and-ai-policymaking/

Copyright

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Digital Fairness Act: Why we need an ambitious DFA to protect digital consumers from manipulative and addictive design practices external link

Albert, J.A., Sax, M. & Helberger, N.
DSA Observatory, 2026
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Links

  • https://dsa-observatory.eu/2026/05/19/digital-fairness-act-why-we-need-an-ambitious-dfa-to-protect-digital-consumers-from-manipulative-and-addictive-design-practices/

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Trademark Law as Regulation of Expression: Why Article 10 ECHR Should Become the Internal Grammar of European Trademark Law external link

Izyumenko, E.
2026
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Abstract

This chapter argues that European trademark law increasingly operates as a system of expression regulation and should therefore be reconstructed in light of Article 10 ECHR. Trademark law no longer merely protects consumers against deception: through anti-dilution protection, expansive infringement standards, and morality-based registration rules, it increasingly governs the circulation of cultural and political meanings attached to trademarks, which themselves have become communicative resources used in parody, artistic appropriation, political criticism, activism, journalism, and public debate. The chapter first identifies the two principal contexts in which these tensions arise: restrictions on expressive reuse of trademarks and refusals to register allegedly immoral or offensive signs. It then analyses the Article 10 principles most relevant to trademark law, focusing on the listener-oriented structure of freedom of expression and its implications for confusion-based and anti-dilution protection; the constitutional treatment of commercial speech and the dangers of overly broad conceptions of “commerciality”; the heightened protection afforded to speech on matters of public interest; the protection of artistic expression, satire, and humour; the broader tolerance required for criticism of powerful corporate actors; and the contextual protection of offensive or provocative expression. Building on this framework, the chapter argues that freedom of expression should not remain an external defence applied only after infringement has been established. Instead, Article 10 values should shape trademark doctrine internally, including the interpretation of use in the course of trade, use in relation to goods or services, anti-dilution protection, due cause, and morality or public-order exclusions. It concludes that trademark law can retain its legitimate market-regulating role only if Article 10 ECHR becomes part of its internal doctrinal structure.

Links

  • https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=6805099

Art. 10 EVRM, Freedom of expression, Trademark law

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The Institute for Information Law (IViR) engages in cutting-edge research furthering the development of information law, and provides a forum for critical debate about the needs, interests, rights and freedoms of the information society

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