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Conference:

The DSA and Platform
Regulation Conference 2026


16 & 17 February 2026
IVIR Lecture Series:

Does EMFA really strengthen media freedom in Europe?

20 February 2026
Vacancy:

Researcher to Explore the Legal Aspects of Inclusive Technologies for Access & Social Participation

IViR Summer Courses:

International Copyright
Law & Policy
Privacy Law & Policy

European Platform Regulation

Latest News

22 January, 2026

Digital Constitutionalism Roundtable | Who controls the news in the Age of AI?

News

The roundtable “Who controls the news in the age of AI”, hosted by MediaLaws, DICOPO and DigCon, brought into sharp focus a central issue of our time: how the governance of AI-mediated information reshapes democratic structures, media pluralism, and constitutional values.

16 January, 2026

Natali Helberger Award

News

The Natali Helberger Award recognizes doctoral students who have conducted research through interdisciplinary collaboration that advances a Public Interest Technology (PIT) perspective in communication studies, journalism studies, and related fields across the social sciences and law. PIT provides a framework for rethinking the institutions, infrastructures, and technology-embedded services that shape society in pursuit of the public good.

27 December, 2025

Herman Cohen Jehoram (1933–2025)

News

On 18 December 2025, Prof. Herman Cohen Jehoram passed away at the age of 92.

See all news

Upcoming events

January 29, 2026

IE-Diner 2026

Amsterdam, The Netherlandshttps://www.delex.nl/shop/opleid…
February 6, 2026

Studiemiddag VvA: De Pastiche-exceptie in het Europese auteursrecht

Amsterdam, The Netherlandshttps://www.verenigingvoorauteur…
February 16 - 17, 2026

The DSA and Platform Regulation Conference 2026

Amsterdam, The Netherlandshttps://dsa-observatory.eu/confe…
February 20, 2026

IViR Lecture Series: Does EMFA really strengthen media freedom in Europe?

  • IViR Lecture
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
February 24, 2026

Academic Freedom Under Attack

Amsterdam, The Netherlandshttps://www.spui25.nl/programma/…
May 19 - 22, 2026

Computer Privacy and Data Protection (CPDP) Conference

Competing Visions Shared Futures

Brussels, Belgiumhttps://www.cpdpconferences.org/
See all events

Latest publications

Procedural Justice and Judicial AI: Substantiating Explainability Rights with the Values of Contestation external link

Metikoš, L. & Domselaar, I. van
Journal of Human-Technology Relations, vol. 3, iss. : 1, pp: 1-34, 2025
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Abstract

The advent of opaque assistive AI in courtrooms has raised concerns about the contestability of these systems, and their impact on procedural justice. The right to an explanation under the GDPR and the AI Act could address the inscrutability of judicial AIfor litigants. To substantiate this right in the domain of justice, we examine utilitarian, rights-based (including dignitarian and Dworkinian approaches), and relational theories of procedural justice. These theories reveal diverse perspectives on contestation, which can help shape explainability rights in the context of judicial AI. These theories respectively highlight different values of litigant contestation; it has instrumental value in error correction, and intrinsic value in respecting litigants’ dignity, either as rational autonomous agents or as socio-relational beings. These insights help us answer three central and practical questions on how the right to an explanation should be operationalized to enable litigant contestation: should explanations be general or specific, to what extent do explanations need to be faithful to the system’s internal behavior or merely provide a plausible approximation, and should more interpretable systems be used, even at the cost of accuracy? These questions are notstrictly legal or technical in nature, but also rely on normative considerations. Finally, this paper also evaluateswhat theory of procedural justice could best safeguard contestation effectively in the age of judicial AI.Thereto, itprovides the first building blocks of an AI-responsive theory of procedural justice.

Links

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.59490/jhtr.2025.3.8163
  • https://journals.open.tudelft.nl/jhtr/article/view/8163/6486

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VPNs, Copyright Territoriality, and Why Borders Still Matter Online: AG Rantos’ Opinion in Anne Frank Fonds (C-788/24) external link

Izyumenko, E.
Kluwer Copyright Blog, 2026
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Links

  • https://legalblogs.wolterskluwer.com/copyright-blog/vpns-copyright-territoriality-and-why-borders-still-matter-online-ag-rantos-opinion-in-anne-frank-fonds-c-78824/

Copyright, territoriality

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CommonsDB feasibility study, part 2 external link

McCarthy, D., Keller, P., Quintais, J., Szkalej, K. & Posth, S.
pp: 49, 2026
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Abstract

Today, part 2 of the CommonsDB Feasibility Study has been published. Building on the initial analysis presented in part 1, the second part of the study assesses the feasibility of the approach in light of real-world developments. Since May 2025, the team has moved the prototype into active testing, deployed public APIs, and launched the CommonsDB Explorer. Part 2 of the study evaluates the technical, legal, and operational performance of the system as it handles live data from our project partners. It offers a detailed look at how we are solving the challenge of creating a trustworthy, decentralized registry for Public Domain and openly licensed works.

Links

  • https://www.commonsdb.org/blog/commonsdb-feasibility-study-part-2-from-design-to-deployment/

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EU copyright law roundup – fourth trimester of 2025 external link

Trapova, A. & Quintais, J.
Kluwer Copyright Blog, 2026
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Links

  • https://legalblogs.wolterskluwer.com/copyright-blog/eu-copyright-law-roundup-fourth-trimester-of-2025/

Copyright

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Op-Ed: “Geo-Blocking Isn’t Perfect – and That’s Okay: AG Rantos on VPNs and Copyright Borders in Anne Frank Fonds (C-788/24)” external link

Izyumenko, E.
EU Law Live, 2026
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Abstract

Digital accessibility continues to test the territorial logic of EU copyright law. In his Opinion of 15 January 2026 in Anne Frank Fonds (C-788/24), Advocate General Rantos considers a question that is simple in formulation yet significant in consequence: whether online availability amounts to an unlawful communication to the public in a Member State where copyright still subsists, even though access is geo-blocked but can be bypassed using a VPN. His answer is a calibrated ‘no – but.’ He rejects the idea that online communications must be aimed at a specific national public to fall within EU copyright law. At the same time, he draws a firm line: effective geo-blocking precludes a communication to the public in the blocked State, even if circumvention is technically possible. The Opinion thus seeks to preserve the territorial fabric of EU copyright without allowing the most restrictive national regimes to project their effects across borders.

Links

  • https://eulawlive.com/op-ed-geo-blocking-isnt-perfect-and-thats-okay-ag-rantos-on-vpns-and-copyright-borders-in-anne-frank-fonds-c-788-24/

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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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