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Lecture:

Regulatory Entanglements – Governing Quantum Technologies

21 April 2026

Inaugural lecture
Prof. Balázs Bodó

The governance of technology, the government of others

23 April 2026
IViR Lecture Series:

AI and Poverty: Should socio-economic status be a protected ground in non-discrimination law?

8 May 2026

IViR Summer Courses:

International Copyright
Law & Policy
Privacy Law & Policy

European Platform Regulation

Latest News

17 April, 2026

Fourth shortlisted story of the Science Fiction and Information Law Writing Competition

News

As part of the fourth IViR Science Fiction and Information Law competition, DigiCon will publish the stories of the finalists every week. The winning stories will be revealed during the CPDP 2026 conference in Brussels on 19-22 May.

17 April, 2026

IViR in the Media: Kristina Irion cited in The Guardian

Media, News

US tech firms successfully lobbied EU to keep datacentre emissions secret. Kristina Irion comments on the news.

16 April, 2026

Third shortlisted story of the Science Fiction and Information Law Writing Competition

News

As part of the fourth IViR Science Fiction and Information Law competition, DigiCon will publish the stories of the finalists every week. The winning stories will be revealed during the CPDP 2026 conference in Brussels on 19-22 May.

See all news

Upcoming events

April 21, 2026

Regulatory Entanglements – Governing Quantum Technologies

Law and Governance of Quantum Technologies Research Group

Amsterdam, The Netherlands
April 23, 2026

Inaugural lecture Prof. Balázs Bodó

The governance of technology, the government of the self and of others

  • Inaugural lecture
Amsterdam, The Netherlandshttps://www.uva.nl/en/content/ev…
May 8, 2026

IViR Lecture Series: AI and Poverty

Should socio-economic status be a protected ground in non-discrimination law?

  • IViR Lecture
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
May 19 - 22, 2026

Computer Privacy and Data Protection (CPDP) Conference

Competing Visions Shared Futures

Brussels, Belgiumhttps://www.cpdpconferences.org/
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/
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Latest publications

EU copyright law roundup – first trimester of 2026 external link

Trapova, A. & Quintais, J.
Kluwer Copyright Blog, 2026
  • Keywords
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Copyright

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Book review: Elisabeth Steindl (2025) A Datafied Mind. Untangling EU Regulation of Emotion Technology and Neurotechnology external link

Valk, E.G.
Law, Technology and Humans, vol. 8, iss. : 1, pp: 140-141, 2026
  • Links
  • RIS
  • Bibtex

Links

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.5204/lthj.4610

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Wege zur KI-Grundvergütung für Kreative – Die Verzahnung individueller und kollektiver Vergütungsmodelle download

Senftleben, M.
Zeitschrift für Urheber- und Medienrecht (ZUM), vol. 30, iss. : 3, pp: 183-189, 2026
  • Abstract
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Abstract

Zur Sicherstellung einer angemessenen Vergütung für die Nutzung urheberrechtlich geschützter Werke zur Entwicklung von generativen KI-Modellen werden sowohl individuelle Lizenzmodelle als auch kollektive Vergütungslösungen vorgeschlagen. Der folgende Beitrag bespricht den Stand der Diskussion und kontrastiert den aktuellen Trend zu individuellen Lizenzvereinbarungen mit potenziellen Vorzügen kollektiver Ansätze. Eine Beurteilung der verschiedenen Regelungsoptionen im Licht gesellschaftlicher Belange und gesetzgeberischer Zielsetzungen schließt die Diskussion ab.

Artificial intelligence, Copyright

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Europa moet uit het AI-slop: Maar we moeten het niet hebben van de Digitale Omnibusverordening download

van Daalen, O.
Nederlands Juristenblad (NJB), iss. : 12, num: 644, pp: 942-945, 2026
  • Abstract
  • Keywords
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Abstract

Terwijl de wereld in razend tempo de AI-revolutie omarmt, worstelt de Europese Unie met de vraag hoe zij haar plek moet opeisen tussen technologische grootmachten als de VS en China. De analyse van Draghi legt pijnlijk bloot hoe ver Europa achterop is geraakt — en hoe regelgeving, ooit een bron van trots, nu vooral als rem wordt gezien. De nieuwe Digitale Omnibusverordening moet daar verandering in brengen, maar laat vooral zien hoe moeilijk het voor Brussel is om een toekomstgerichte visie op AI en data te ontwikkelen.

Artificial intelligence, Digitale Omnibusverordening, Europe

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The Many Shades of Clouds: How Law Fails (Us) in Seeing Power in the Digital Economy

Terzis, P., Mittal, A. & van Hoboken, J.
Regulation & Governance, 2026
  • Abstract
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Abstract

Cloud infrastructures form the backbone of our contemporary (digital) production environment. Despite their centrality, legal and scholarly practice have not been treating cloud infrastructures as single objects of/for study. In other words, we have laws for regulating services and products that flow from (within) cloud infrastructures, but we have yet to grapple with their operators' ability to: (1) render things administratively calculable and legible; and (2) to dictate the global tempo of innovation by orchestrating technological trajectories. This is a problem and a consequence of a fragmented legal epistemology that has been constantly searching for gaps to fill in what has been perceived as a linear continuum of legal and technological development. Alas, this paper argues that we (legal scholars and practitioners) have been looking too closely to these developments to be able to see them. In this direction, the paper explains what we have missed in the (non-)regulation of cloud infrastructures, why, and what we can do to start seeing, learning, and talking about them in a way that better reflects their nature and power in modern economies and societies. And, at a time when various jurisdictions around the world are fragmenting the world of cloud infrastructures into lands of “sovereignty” ordered and monitored by multinational corporations, we find this legal and policy endeavor to be as necessary as ever.

Links

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/rego.70149

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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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