The Future of Digital Rights
AI, biometric surveillance, and the metaverse — emerging technologies that will define the next frontier of digital rights.
AI and the Future of Privacy
Artificial intelligence is transforming the digital rights landscape in ways that existing laws struggle to address. Facial recognition technology is deployed in airports, stadiums, and city streets — often without the knowledge or consent of those being scanned. China has built the most extensive facial recognition network in the world, with over 600 million cameras.
AI systems trained on vast datasets raise new questions about consent: if your photos, posts, and writings were used to train an AI model, do you have any rights over how that model is used? The EU's AI Act (2024) is the first comprehensive attempt to regulate AI, banning certain uses (like social scoring) and requiring transparency for high-risk applications.
Deepfakes — AI-generated fake videos and audio — threaten not just individual privacy but the very concept of evidence and truth. As these technologies become more accessible, the challenge of protecting digital rights becomes exponentially more complex.