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Conference:

The DSA and Platform
Regulation Conference 2026


16 & 17 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

27 December, 2025

Herman Cohen Jehoram (1933–2025)

News

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

19 December, 2025

Seed Grant Call: Datafied Warfare and Societal Resilience

Grants

Responsible Digital Transformations (RDT) is pleased to announce a new call for Seed Grant proposals, with a thematic focus on Datafied Warfare and Societal Resilience.

18 December, 2025

Who should decide what you may post online? : Inside the EU’s struggle to regulate AI content moderation

Interview ai content moderation digital platforms

Can you post a deepfake of a politician on Instagram? Or use an artist’s music in your video? Sometimes yes, sometimes no. According to researcher João Pedro Quintais, clearer EU rules for AI-driven content moderation are urgently needed. ‘If we don’t regulate well, what we can post is left to companies that optimise for profit’, he warns. Quintais received a Vidi grant to research how the EU addresses the moderation of problematic content on digital platforms.

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Upcoming events

January 15, 2026

Reclaiming our Digital Future: Why public values matter in shaping our digital infrastructure

Amsterdam, The Netherlandshttps://dezwijger.nl/programma/r…
January 29, 2026

IE-Diner 2026

Amsterdam, The Netherlandshttps://www.delex.nl/shop/opleid…
February 16 - 17, 2026

The DSA and Platform Regulation Conference 2026

Amsterdam, The Netherlandshttps://dsa-observatory.eu/confe…
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…
See all events

Latest publications

Annotatie bij HvJEU 24 oktober 2024 (Kwantum Nederland en Kwantum België) download

Hugenholtz, P.B.
Auteurs & Media, 2026
  • Abstract
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Abstract

Dit is een belangrijk arrest over de verhouding tussen het unierecht en het internationale auteursrecht. Volgens het Europese Hof van Justitie geldt de door Richtlijn 2001/29/EG (de ‘InfoSoc-richtlijn’) geharmoniseerde auteursrechtelijke bescherming voor alle werken ongeacht hun land van oorsprong en mogen de lidstaten van de Unie de reciprociteitsregel van art. 2 lid 7 van de Berner Conventie (‘BC’) daarom niet toepassen om werken van toegepaste kunst afkomstig uit de Verenigde Staten auteursrechtelijke bescherming te ontzeggen.

Links

  • Annotatie_AM_2026

Copyright

RIS

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Music Recommender Systems And the Copyright Blind Spot: Conceptualising the Right to Be Heard external link

Szkalej, K.
pp: 15, 2025
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Abstract

Digital music platforms project an image of unprecedented abundance, linguistic diversity, and borderless circulation, yet the infrastructures that organise musical discovery increasingly shape who is heard and who remains silent. This paper argues that while EU copyright law effectively secures lawful availability, rights management, and remuneration, it remains structurally indifferent to the allocation of cultural attention. As musical discovery is now mediated primarily through algorithmic recommender systems, visibility has ceased to be a by-product of access and has become a function of metadata, optimisation, and design. The resulting condition of being represented but not heard exposes a doctrinal blind spot in the European copyright acquis and raises broader constitutional concerns relating to artistic freedom, freedom of expression, and cultural participation. Against this backdrop the paper conceptualises a right to be heard as a relational and infrastructural dimension of cultural participation and explores whether prominence-based regulatory approach, inspired by the AVMS Directive, could offer a proportionate response to algorithmically mediated cultural exclusion in the internal market that is compatible with the freedom to conduct a business.

Links

  • https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=5967014

Copyright, music industry, recommender systems

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Evaluation Report D2.4: Critical legal analysis of the application of European election disinformation regulation to community-governed platforms external link

Fahy, R., Trogrlić, G. & van Hoboken, J.
2025
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Abstract

The latest deliverable of the DEM-Debate project authored by the University of Amsterdam explores how the new EU legal framework on election disinformation applies to Wikipedia. The legal analysis evaluates, through critical lenses, the impact of the new rules on the functioning of community-governed platforms in addressing disinformation related to the 2024 European Parliament elections, drawing some preliminary conclusions on how to inform policy making: Wikipedia editorial rules together with its patrolling system are good examples from which future legislation on election disinformation can draw inspiration. The report starts by accounting for the latest developments in the application of the EU disinformation legal framework, including two rulings of the European Court of Human Rights and the stance adopted by the American administration and legislative bodies towards the Wikimedia Foundation (WMF). Then, it details the findings of the critical analysis of the EU legal framework.

Links

  • https://wikimedia.brussels/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/D2.4-Critical-Legal-Analysis.pdf

disinformation, elections, Online platforms, Regulation

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The interface of rights to access public sector information and copyright: Opinion of the European Copyright Society external link

van Eechoud, M., Griffiths, J., Husovec, M. & Sganga, C.
Kluwer Copyright Blog, 2026
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Links

  • https://legalblogs.wolterskluwer.com/copyright-blog/the-interface-of-rights-to-access-public-sector-information-and-copyright-opinion-of-the-european-copyright-society/

access, Copyright, public sector information

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LAION Round 2: Machine-Readable but Still Not Actionable — The Lack of Progress on TDM Opt-Outs – Part 2 external link

Keller, P.
Kluwer Copyright Blog, 2025
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Links

  • https://legalblogs.wolterskluwer.com/copyright-blog/laion-round-2-machine-readable-but-still-not-actionable-the-lack-of-progress-on-tdm-opt-outs-part-2/

Artificial intelligence, Copyright, Text and Data Mining (TDM)

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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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Nieuwe Achtergracht 166
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P.O. Box 15514
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