Days: Wednesday, June 17th Thursday, June 18th Friday, June 19th
View this program: with abstractssession overviewtalk overview
The Geopolitical Union and Tech Governance: Regulatory Mercantilism and the Restructuring of Digital Europe
When Commission President von der Leyen announced the birth of the Geopolitical Union in 2023, she declared areorientation of the Commission’s approach to external partnerships. As old alliances appeared to crumble, and new threats appeared on the horizon, Europe’s ostensible trust in the stability and dependency of the liberal international order was replaced with a growing sense of vulnerability in a multicentric, hostile world. From data centres to AI to content regulation to electric vehicles, the EU is positioned as trying to catch up to more technologically advanced rivals. With this came a shift in discourse used to describe Europe’s challenges, with the incorporation of terms such as ’sovereignty’, ’strategic autonomy’, and ‘dependencies’ moving from the narrow domain of security and defence into the general lexicon of governance.
This keynote expands on these shifts, and what they mean for Europe’s tech governance in an increasingly febrile geopolitical environment. I argue that the underlying rationale of regulation, particularly in strategic fields such as digital, energy, and environment, is characterised by ‘regulatory mercantilism’. Within regulatory mercantilism, the logic of regulatory interventions becomes predicated not on economic efficiencies, or governance by and through private sector actors on the basis of presumed expertise. Instead, regulatory intervention becomes characterised by concerns over geopolitical instability or perceived threat, where external dependency is framed as vulnerability, and Europe’s sovereignty reinforced by guaranteeing strategic autonomy. In this respect, certain hallmarks of historical mercantilism are present. Instead of ‘economy’ and ’security’ being potential trade-offs in regulating a given technology, they are instead mutually constituent, with achieving one helping to achieve the other. Regulation increasingly becomes used for industrial policy at home, while exporting regulatory approaches, norms, and values abroad.
Within this framework, it is important to take a more holistic approach to understanding European tech governance, particularly vis à vis relations with China and the United States, and placing them within the broader geopolitical and geostrategic contexts in which Europe finds itself. It requires us not to look at individual technologies or legislative initiatives in isolation, but to understand the interrelation between technologies and legislative interventions across domains. It requires us not to consider ‘digital’ as something separate and distinct, but something that blurs the lines between the intangible and the material. And it requires us to recognise that geography matters, and despite notions of the free flow of information and the borderless nature of digital technologies and communications, questions of ‘where’ technology is based, and ‘who’ controls it, become central to contemporary technology governance.’
| 10:00 | Individual Data Sovereignty & the GDPR: A Case Study of CrypTex (abstract) |
| 10:20 | Can Fundamental Rights Be Calculated? Cyber Risk, Metrics and the Limits of EU Digital Governance (abstract) |
| 10:40 | CONSENTIS: Identity and Consent Management for EU Digital and Data Strategies (abstract) PRESENTER: Giovana Peluso Lopes |
| 11:30 | Article 88(c) GDPR and the Next Frontier of EU Data Protection and Artificial Intelligence: Rethinking Legitimate Interests, Data Minimization, and the Future of Fundamental Rights – a peril or a welcome change? (abstract) |
| 11:50 | Pushing the boundaries of the principle of lawfulness or also the core values of EU data protection? (abstract) |
| 12:10 | When Rights Stack, Control Collapses: Consent Fatigue as a Governance Failure in the EU Digital Acquis (abstract) |
| 12:30 | Necessary processing and EU data protection law (abstract) |
| 11:30 | Inscribing Difference: Structural Violence and Algorithmic Identity Management in the German Asylum System (abstract) |
| 11:50 | Rethinking Judicial Review Standards to Enable Effective Contestation of Administrative Decisions Involving Algorithms (abstract) |
| 12:10 | Gaming the System (abstract) |
| 12:30 | Procedural Justice and Judicial AI; Substantiating Explainability Rights with the Values of Contestation (abstract) |
| 11:30 | Whose expertise matters? The Meta cases as a case study for comparing the approach of the EU and of the US to the use of external expertise in competition law enforcement (abstract) |
| 11:50 | AI personalized pricing at the intersection of data protection and competition law (abstract) |
| 12:10 | AI Assistants as Orchestrators in Emerging ‘Super-Apps’ Ecosystem: A DMA Centred Regulatory Response (abstract) |
| 12:30 | Ranking Transparency in EU Law: An Empirical Content Analysis of Online Platform' Terms of Service (abstract) |
| 11:30 | From Inner Space to Interface: Protecting Freedom of Thought in the Digital Age: Emine Ozge Yildirim-Vranckaert, Felicitas Benziger, Alexandra Ziaka, Rebecca Zeilstra (abstract) |
| 11:30 | Environmental protection in the Artificial Intelligence Act: charting a non-anthropocentric approach (abstract) |
| 11:50 | Law at the Crossroads of the Twin Transition (abstract) |
| 13:20 | Constructing Security for the Twin Transitions: The Tragedy of EU Law at the Intersection of Climate and AI Governance (abstract) |
| 13:40 | The Twin Transition: EU Competition Law Framework at a Resilience Test (abstract) |
| 11:30 | AI-Driven AML in the EU: compliant design and operational choices (abstract) |
| 11:30 | Algorithmic pollution and the economics of artificial information: Mapping the Harms of AI Slop (abstract) |
| 11:50 | Reclaiming a European approach to AI: How did we get here, and where should we go? (abstract) |
| 12:10 | “Learning from your neighbours”: Prudential provisions of the EU AI Act for the UK insurance supervisory regime. (abstract) |
| 12:30 | Principles for Health Data Governance in the Era of AI: Global South Insights from Brazil (abstract) |
| 11:30 | The DMA’s Contribution to EU Digital Sovereignty (abstract) |
| 11:50 | Creating Enabling Infrastructures in Digital Markets: A Value Creation Framework for Interoperability (abstract) |
| 12:10 | EU Big Tech Laws: An Emerging Public Utilities Regulation (abstract) |
| 12:30 | Gatekeepers Beyond the DMA: Asymmetric Data Access, Digital Sovereignty, and the Emergence of a New Paradigm in EU Tech Governance (abstract) |
| 14:00 | A Theory of identifiability (abstract) |
| 14:20 | The Law of Everyone: Non-Personal Data as a Concept of Data Protection Law (abstract) |
| 14:40 | Accountability as a Check on Controllers’ Decision-Making (abstract) |
| 15:00 | The future of the home, in a global “digipolis”: smarter living and personhood (abstract) |
| 14:00 | An Overview of AI Ethics: Moral Concerns Through the Lens of Principles, Lived Realities and Power Structures (abstract) |
| 14:20 | Better together? Human oversight as means to achieve fairness in the European AI Act governance (abstract) |
| 14:40 | Limits-of-the-loop: How far can human-in-the-loop oversight take us towards the just governance of AI? (abstract) |
| 15:00 | Between values and innovation: bias versus the creation and use of AI in cultural heritage institutions (abstract) |
| 14:00 | From Essential Facilities to Essential Digital Facilities? Re-thinking Article 102 TFEU in the Age of Platforms and Generative AI (abstract) |
| 14:20 | Engage First, Innovate Later: Testing Article 102 TFEU Against Addictive Design (abstract) |
| 14:40 | The Big Growth Narrative: does competition politics/cy bend to new interests? (abstract) |
| 15:00 | Interplay between Innovation, Competition, and the Size of Companies in the Commission’s Merger Decisions concerning Digital Markets (abstract) |
| 14:00 | Neurotechnologies and Rights for the Mind: Timo Istace, Sjors Ligthart, Julie van Pée, Naomi van de Pol (abstract) |
| 14:00 | Maintaining Control in an AI-Driven World: Towards Machine Unlearning and Consumer Autonomy: Patricia Prufer, Pradeep Kumar, Inge Graef, Bart Engelen, Giulia Sandri (abstract) |
| 14:00 | Contracts yes but not only: the interpretive implications of using terms and conditions as regulatory instruments under the Digital Services Act (abstract) |
| 14:20 | All Bark and No Bite? From Rights-Based Rhetoric to Procedural Realities in the DSA’s Remedy Mechanisms (abstract) |
| 14:40 | I’m a Robot, Let Me In: Data Access-by-Design for Consumer AI Agents (abstract) |
| 15:00 | Lawful but Invisible: The ECHR’s Missing Doctrine for Platform-Governed Public Spheres (abstract) |
| 14:00 | Digital addiction: is the Digital Services Act up to the task? (abstract) |
| 14:00 | Collective data governance and the curse of symmetry: reflections on strategy, scale, and governance (abstract) |
| 14:20 | Algorithmic Transparency and Public Case Law Databases in the AI Act: Indirect Risk, Cognitive Function, and Regulatory Gaps (abstract) |
| 14:40 | The Legal Production of Accuracy: Towards What Ends? (abstract) |
| 15:00 | The Simplification Edition: Right to the Protection of Personal Data Sold Separately (abstract) |
| 16:00 | The role of national procedural law in effective data protection enforcement: a case study before the Irish courts (abstract) |
| 16:20 | Reforming One-Stop-Shop Mechanism: the Assessment of New EU Procedural Rules for Cross-Border GDPR Enforcement in Light of CJEU Standards (abstract) |
| 16:40 | Clarifying “Dissuasiveness” in GDPR Sanctions through the Guidance and Decisions of the European Data Protection Board (abstract) |
| 17:00 | Online platforms’ shaping data access under the GDPR. An empirical study into uses of Data Download Packages (abstract) |
| 16:00 | e-Evidence in Action: Tracing the Life Cycle of a European Production Order: Marc van der Ham, Stanislaw Tosza, Gavin Robinson, Vanessa Franssen (abstract) |
| 16:00 | PANEL: What Do We Actually Know About Algorithms, Competition, and Competition Law? (abstract) |
| 16:00 | Regulating Deepfakes in the EU: Platform Accountability, Legal Uncertainty, and Democratic Freedoms (abstract) |
| 16:20 | When Platforms Go Dark: Legal Challenges to Social Media Shutdowns between Freedom of Expression and Security. A Case Law Analysis. (abstract) |
| 16:40 | Contested Entanglement: Rethinking EU Platform Regulation and Freedom of Expression (abstract) |
| 17:00 | Ruwiki, the Not-So-Free Encyclopedia: Disinformation and Propaganda on a State-Governed Platform (abstract) |
| 16:00 | Cyberbullying among children: a definitional landscape analysis in EU Member States’ legislation (abstract) |
| 16:20 | Cybersecurity as a consumer right (abstract) |
| 16:40 | One TikTok to Cure Them All: Believe and You Shall Not Be Protected (abstract) |
| 17:00 | For your eyes only? Access to personal data under the 2024 EU AML/CFT legislative reform (abstract) |
| 16:00 | Making software source code special: Inverse compatibility of EU digital trade law and the Artificial Intelligence Act (abstract) |
| 16:20 | Whose Crypto Asset ? Custody, Possession, and Ownership Claims in Crypto Asset Service Agreements (abstract) |
| 16:40 | New Media at the Boundaries of Competition Law: Value Allocation, IP Protection and Competition in the Digital News Media Ecosystemata f (abstract) |
| 17:00 | When private discretion becomes political: giving shape to a legitimacy concern under the Digital Services Act (abstract) |
| 16:00 | Data Rights and Wrongs (abstract) |
View this program: with abstractssession overviewtalk overview
Data protection law as gender performance
Gender is one of the most significant informational categories in our societies. And while gender is generally experienced as intrinsically and deeply connected to our identity, data about gender proliferate nowadays in ways that tend to partially escape us. In addition of being assigned a gender at birth, and typically having some gender marker in official documents, we are more and more often algorithmically assigned a gender without necessarily having been informed about it, for instance while using online platforms or confronted with cameras. Data protection law being, in principle, the ultimate tool for us to somehow understand, control or negotiate what happens to our personal data, it should logically emerge as a privileged instrument for us to comprehend and perhaps perform our gender. But is data protection law actually fit for such purpose, in theory and/or in practice? This talk will critically inquire into these premises and questions.
| 11:30 | Innovation on Fast Forward: Privacy Challenges in the EU’s AI Agenda (abstract) |
| 11:50 | The Right to Be Un-Inferred: Minding the Inference Gap in the Algorithmic Medicalisation of Immersive Data (abstract) |
| 12:10 | Cross-Border Flows of Genetic Data in EU-China Scientific Collaboration: A Comparative Analysis of Regulatory Barriers (abstract) |
| 12:30 | Reducing Regulatory Blindness: AI-based Detection Technology (abstract) |
| 11:30 | Pride and non-prejudice: cybersecurity and national security in the EU legal order (abstract) PRESENTER: Lorenzo Dalla Corte |
| 11:30 | Voluntary Governance of Voluntary Sustainability Disclosures: Theory and a Large Language Model Analysis (abstract) |
| 11:50 | Transparency in Text and Data Mining: Legal Challenges of Generative AI (abstract) |
| 12:10 | Creativity Without an Author? Generative Artificial Intelligence and the Stress Test of European Copyright Law (abstract) |
| 12:30 | The Challenging Path of Artificial Intelligence's Ownership Right (abstract) |
| 11:30 | Operationalizing the DSA: VLOP Enforcement Practices and the Governance of Illegal Content in Online Commerce (abstract) |
| 11:50 | The DSA as tool of Spatial Governance (abstract) |
| 12:10 | Digital Services Act and the Brussels Effect, a transatlantic culture clash in platform liability (abstract) |
| 12:30 | Platform Regulation Through Civil Courts: The DSA's Private Enforcement on the Ground (abstract) |
| 11:30 | Days of Futures Past: 30 years of ‘Law, Policy and the Internet’ and 20 years of Gikii (abstract) |
| 11:30 | Walking on the Tightrope Between Democracy and Technocracy: Soft Law Instruments in EU Digital Regulation (abstract) |
| 11:50 | Everything's (not) Gonna Be Alright –Governing first-, second-, and third-order risks in EU platform regulation (abstract) |
| 12:10 | Misplaced Trust: Why trust is not an appropriate driver of regulatory policy in the digital age (abstract) |
| 12:30 | Regulatory governance of ‘clean’ technologies: Comparing major economies’ support for Lithium-ion batteries (abstract) |
| 11:30 | A critical investigation into the proposed single reporting mechanism for cybersecurity incident reporting in the Digital Omnibus proposal: the good, the bad and the ugly (abstract) |
| 11:50 | Current Generative AI red teaming practices and their incompatibilities: Problem statement and solutions (abstract) |
| 12:10 | It runs in the family: Persistence of data protection issues in distributed systems (abstract) |
| 12:30 | Facilitating Lawful Interception and Hacking: A New Legal Assistance Obligation for IT Infrastructure Companies in Combating Disruptive Cybercrime (abstract) |
| 15:30 | Enforcement in the Age of AI: Reshaping and Reclaiming Control over Data, Speech, and Creativity (abstract) |
| 15:30 | Panel: Towards a European Firewall: Perspectives on Cybersecurity Standardisation in the EU: Pratham Ajmera, Christina Del Real, Simon Parkin (abstract) |
| 15:30 | Contractual Evolution for Computing Revolution: is that enough? (abstract) |
| 15:50 | Weaponizing Earth–Space Infrastructure: Digital Sovereignty, Dual Use, and the Fragmentation of Planetary Governance (abstract) |
| 16:10 | When Big Tech Goes to War: Weaponizing Digital Infrastructure and the Limits of Dual-Use Governance (abstract) |
| 16:30 | AI-DSS and ethical trade-offs in armed conflict: do we need to reconsider the in bello trilemma? (abstract) |
| 15:30 | Separating the privileged wheat from the chaff with AI: requirements for AI-based filtering in criminal investigations (abstract) |
| 15:50 | Automated Management of Notitiae Criminis in the Italian Prosecutorial System: Legal Frameworks for AI Integration (abstract) |
| 16:10 | Searching Identity Through Method: Law & Tech from a Criminal Law Perspective (abstract) |
| 16:30 | Centralized automated fraud detection in the digital euro: reconciling data protection with financial oversight and stability (abstract) |
| 15:30 | Meta questions on what it means to do legal research: Lessons learned from research on data spaces (abstract) |
| 15:30 | Coloured minds colour the world– could neurodivergent brains help evolve AI sparsity? (abstract) |
| 15:50 | From China with love: Virtual AI Companions and Power of Vertical Regulation (abstract) |
| 16:10 | What to do when heptapods arrive. How should the difference between human and algorithmic meaning-making make a difference for information law? (abstract) |
| 15:30 | Vulnerability-Sensitive Social Media Policy Guidelines (abstract) |
View this program: with abstractssession overviewtalk overview
Controlling Malicious Misuse of AI Across the Stack
| 11:30 | Digital sovereignty models and international legal fragmentation in cyberspace (abstract) |
| 11:50 | Generative AI as Critical Infrastructure: National Security, Strategic Autonomy, and the Reform of International Economic Law (abstract) |
| 12:10 | Are We Prepared? Legal Responses to AI-Driven Bioterrorism Threats (abstract) |
| 12:30 | Governing Resilience on Borrowed Infrastructure: Designing a Convergent Cyber‑Resilience Architecture for EU Financial Institutions (abstract) |
| 11:30 | The quest for algorithmic transparency: comparative insights on the right to explanation from the GDPR to the AI Act. (abstract) |
| 11:50 | Please eXplain Yourself: Translation of Policy and Law Aspirations for ‘ExplAInable’ Systems (abstract) |
| 12:10 | It's complicated. The relationship of algorithmic fairness and non-discrimination provisions for high-risk systems in the EU AI Act (abstract) |
| 12:30 | Ghost in the Transparency Shell: How the European Commission’s New Rules of Procedure Shirk Transparency of Regulated Digital Technologies and AI (abstract) |
| 11:30 | Freedom of Expression in the Age of Artificial Intelligence: Challenges and Regulatory Responses (abstract) |
| 11:30 | Digital Sovereignty in the Age of Big Tech: A Possible Pathway for the European Union Beyond Regulatory Activism? (abstract) |
| 11:50 | Decolonizing AI: Reclaiming indigenous data sovereignty through the constitutional challenge of epistemic justice (abstract) |
| 12:10 | Digital Sovereignty in the European Parliament (abstract) |
| 12:30 | “[A] way to make sure that humans stayed special and central”: from Brussels to Nairobi effect? (abstract) |
| 11:30 | Common European Data Spaces: Where are we heading to?: Federico Costantini, Marco S. Nobile, Pia Groenewolt (abstract) |
| 11:30 | Turning Internal Mental States into Data: Legal Uncertainties Surrounding the Regulation of Neurotechnology-Derived Information (abstract) |
| 11:50 | A Matter of Life and Bits: Biological Computers as Personal Data (abstract) |
| 12:10 | A Stress Test for EU Law on Non-Medical Neurotechnologies (abstract) |
| 12:30 | Governing Neurotech: The Political Economy of Next-Generation Tech Regulation (abstract) |
| 11:30 | Digital Sovereignty in Transition: Law, Trade, and the Reconfiguration of Global Economic Governance (abstract) |
| 11:50 | The Legal Construction of European Digital Sovereignty (abstract) |
| 12:10 | Expanding the Horizons of AI Governance: An Interdisciplinary Analysis of Regulatory Models in the EU, Japan, and Brazil (abstract) |
| 12:30 | The highest form of techno-capitalist planning? – Law in the governance of emerging quantum innovation value chains (abstract) |
| 14:00 | Maps as Methodological Encounters between Regulatory Frameworks and Digital Technology (abstract) |
| 14:00 | Alone Together Online: Digital Loneliness and the Gaps in EU Digital Regulation (abstract) |
| 14:20 | Swipe Right for a Heart: Embedding fairness in India’s AI-driven Organ Transplant Allocation. (abstract) |
| 14:40 | AI-Enabled Triage Systems in Emergency Medicine: The Fairness of Subjecting One’s Right to Timely Care to Automated Decision-Making (abstract) |
| 15:00 | Ambient AI scribes: A poisoned chalice for the therapeutic relationship? (abstract) |
| 14:00 | AI-Mediated Elections and Intersectional Risk Governance in India: Rethinking Democratic Resilience Beyond Tripolar Regulatory Models (abstract) |
| 14:20 | Platform Liability and Accuracy for False User Content: Lessons from Nigeria and the EU (abstract) |
| 14:40 | Safeguard or Escape Route? Public Interest Provisions in Indonesia’s Personal Data Protection Law (abstract) |
| 15:00 | (Half) truths are stranger than fiction: An exploration into regulation of news consumption through social media intermediaries in India (abstract) |
| 14:00 | Refining the toolkit: the eight modalities of regulation (abstract) |
| 14:20 | Achieving A Socially Just Transition Through Risk-Based Digital Legislation: Insights And Lessons From The European Union (abstract) |
| 14:40 | EU Regulation of General-Purpose AI and Its Implementation Through Private Regulation: A Quest for Legal Certainty (abstract) |
| 15:00 | From Affected Publics to Strong Publics: Towards a Radical Agenda for AI Governance (abstract) |
| 14:00 | From Compliance to Disclosure: Tracing Cybersecurity and Supply Chain Risk in Dutch Annual Reports (abstract) |
| 14:20 | Cybersecurity in the age of AI: an in-depth examination into the dual role of data minimisation in EU cybersecurity law (abstract) |
| 14:40 | Search for safeguards towards the accuracy and reliability of AI evidence (abstract) |
| 15:00 | Hybrid conflicts, European cybersecurity obligations and private companies (abstract) |
| 15:20 | Cybersecurity Information Sharing in the EU: Regulatory Promotion Without Legal Certainty (abstract) |
| 14:00 | Labour Rights Between AI and Sustainability: From a Rights-Based Paradigm to Goal-Oriented Governance (abstract) |
| 14:20 | The Fundamental Rights Discourse in the AI Act: Power, Actors, and Framing (abstract) |
| 14:40 | The Interplay between Fundamental Rights and Security in EU Digital Law (abstract) |
| 15:00 | Conceptualising Digital Well-Being under the EU Law (abstract) |
| 14:00 | The Internet of Trash: Tackling eWaste through the Right to Repair. (abstract) |
| 14:20 | Who and where are the heroes of the energy transition? Integrating an inclusiveness approach to citizen participation (abstract) |
| 14:40 | Digital Technologies and the Renewal of Forest Governance under International Law (abstract) |
| 15:00 | Who Owns the Harvest of Data? Agricultural Data Governance and Power Reconfiguration under the EU Regulatory Framework (abstract) |
| 16:00 | Editorial Freedom in the age of GenAI: A case study from the Netherlands (abstract) |
| 16:20 | Value alignment in General Purpose AI Supervision (abstract) |
| 16:40 | Anthropomorphised Authority: Ministerial‑AI and the Legal‑Institutional Void (abstract) |
| 17:00 | Buying Power, Shifting Paradigms: Public Procurement as a Battleground for Transatlantic Tech Sovereignty (abstract) |
| 16:00 | The emergence of digital regulatory capitalism (abstract) |
| 16:20 | AI Foundation Models as Self-Improving Infrastructures (abstract) |
| 16:40 | From Soft Law to Binding Rules: Transitional Models of AI Governance in Türkiye (abstract) |
| 17:00 | The "Quantum Paradox." Examining the Liability for Data Breach, the Duty of Care and Retroactivity in the European Union, United States of America, and People’s Republic of China Privacy Frameworks (abstract) |
| 16:00 | Borderless Data, Bounded Power: The EU’s Data Governance Paradox (abstract) |
| 16:20 | Beyond the Market and the Public-Private Distinction: A Research Agenda for the Democratic Law of Infrastructure (abstract) |
| 16:40 | European Health Data Space: Infrastructural concerns and concentration of power beyond data protection (abstract) |
| 17:00 | Secure Processing Environments under EU Law (abstract) |
| 16:00 | The “International Standards Effect” in Global Technology Regulation (abstract) |
| 16:20 | Global API Governance under International Economic Law: Evidence, Standards and Power (abstract) |
| 16:40 | Who leads AI standardization? The fragmentation and geopolitics of international technical standards (abstract) |
| 17:00 | EU Digital Sovereignty through AI Standards: Institutional Implications (abstract) |