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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:

Onderzoeker

IViR Summer Courses:

International Copyright
Law & Policy
Privacy Law & Policy

European Platform Regulation

Latest News

20 February, 2026

Politico: EU tech enforcer tells officials not to be scared by US threats

News

POLITICO Europe reported about the keynote speech by Prabhat Agarwal (DG Connect, European Commission) at the DSA and Platform Regulation Conference on Monday 16 February in Amsterdam (University of Amsterdam).

19 February, 2026

Podcast: The Digital Services Act is a Lightning Rod for Debate

News

This week the DSA Observatory hosted the second DSA and Platform Regulation Conference in Amsterdam with many of our IViR staff involved in the organisation or as speakers. Ahead of the conference, the DSA Observatory’s Paddy Leerssen, Magdalena Jóźwiak, and John Albert spoke with Ramsha Jahangir of Tech Policy Press to reflect on what has changed, and how the research landscape has evolved, in the two years since the DSA came fully into effect across the European Union.

10 February, 2026

New visiting researchers

News

IViR is pleased to introduce our three new visiting researchers who started at the beginning of this year. IViR is committed to welcome PhD candidates, post-doctoral and senior researchers in the field of information law to exchange ideas and provide an environment where researchers from different places can learn from each other.

See all news

Upcoming events

March 10, 2026

The AI Gigafactory

How the EU learned to stop worrying and love the hyperscaler

Amsterdam, The Netherlandshttps://spui25.nl/programma/the-…
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/
June 17, 2026

Copyright’s Next Generation Event

The Hague, The Netherlandshttps://alai2026.org/#nextgen
See all events

Latest publications

De AI-Verordening, de Code of Practice en het auteursrecht download

Hugenholtz, P.B.
Auteursrecht, iss. : 1, pp: 5-10, 2026
  • Abstract
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Abstract

De AI-Verordening, ook wel AI Act geheten, heeft op het eerste gezicht weinig met het auteursrecht van doen. Van de talloze regels van de Verordening heeft er precies één direct betrekking op het auteursrecht. Art. 53 lid 1 (c) AI-Vo verplicht aanbieders van algemene AI-modellen een beleid op te stellen “ter naleving van het Unierecht inzake auteursrechten en naburige rechten”. Dit artikel bespreekt de inhoud en reikwijdte van deze verplichting en onderzoekt de mogelijke extraterritoriale werking ervan. Tevens wordt ingegaan op de GPAI Code of Practice, waarin het auteursrechtelijke voorschrift van de AI-Verordening geconcretiseerd wordt.

Links

  • Auteursrecht_2026_1

AI Act, Artificial intelligence, code of practice, Copyright

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Annotatie bij Europees Hof voor de Rechten van de Mens 8 juli 2025 (Google / Rusland) download

Dommering, E.
Nederlandse Jurisprudentie, iss. : 6, num: 52, pp: 1192-1194, 2026
  • Abstract
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Abstract

Google weigert bepaalde YouTube-video’s te verwijderen en een geblokkeerd YouTube-kanaal te herstellen. De Russische autoriteiten leggen daarop een zeer hoge boete op, alsmede een last onder dwangsom. De rechterlijke beslissingen in de daarop volgende procedure zijn onvoldoende gemotiveerd. Schending vrijheid van meningsuiting (art. 10 EVRM) en eerlijk proces (art. 6 EVRM).

Links

  • NJ 2026 52 - Russische dwangmaatregelen tegen videowebsite Youtube. Rechterlijke beslissingen ontoereikend gemotiveerd. (1)

Case notes, Freedom of expression

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Een naburig deepfake-recht. Echt? download

Hugenholtz, P.B.
Nederlands Juristenblad (NJB), iss. : 6, num: 299, pp: 442-450, 2026
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Abstract

Deepfake porno, politieke manipulatie en misinformatie reclame hebben verstrekkende gevolgen voor privacy, democratie en vertrouwen in media en wetenschap. Najaar 2025 is een initiatiefwetsvoorstel gepresenteerd dat voorziet in de invoering van een naburig recht op deepfakes van personen. Het voorstel kent aan iedere natuurlijke persoon een exclusief en licentieerbaar recht toe op ‘zijn’ of ‘haar’ deepfakes. Daarmee wordt een in wezen privacyrechtelijke aanspraak gegoten in het jasje van het intellectuele eigendomsrecht. Deze benadering roept vragen op. Is aanvullende bescherming tegen deepfakes echt nodig, nu het bestaande recht reeds een uitgebreid arsenaal aan bescherming biedt? Past een dergelijk verhandelbaar recht binnen de systematiek van het Nederlandse en Europese recht? En draagt zo’n nieuw naburig recht bij aan de beteugeling van deepfakes of normaliseert en commercialiseert het juist het fenomeen dat het zegt te willen reguleren?

Links

  • NJB06_Een naburig deepfake-recht

Auteursrecht, deepfake, wet op de naburige rechten

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Music streaming debates series part 2: streaming and GenAI discussions in canon external link

Valk, E.G.
Kluwer Copyright Blog, 2026
  • Abstract
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Abstract

Part 1 of this series gave a general overview of the copyright-related discussions regarding streaming services from the last year. In Part 2, we will gain a clearer picture of the expected challenges for fair remuneration and control over one’s artistry created by new GenAI music services. Also, the implications for “good old” streaming services will be examined. Some concrete legal solutions will be proposed, while also highlighting uncertainties that remain.

Links

  • https://legalblogs.wolterskluwer.com/copyright-blog/music-streaming-debates-series-part-2-streaming-and-genai-discussions-in-canon/

Artificial intelligence, Copyright, music, remuneration, streaming services

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Is Upcycling Always Green – and Should It Be? Reconsidering the Rationale for Accommodating Upcycling within IP Law and Leveraging the Potential of Quotation and ‘Due Cause’ external link

Izyumenko, E.
2026
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Abstract

Climate change has forced legal systems to question many of their long-standing assumptions, including the largely linear logic that continues to underpin intellectual property (IP) law. Existing scholarship has convincingly shown that copyright and trade mark laws often hinder circular practices such as repair and upcycling, prompting calls for greater flexibility or the ‘greenification’ of IP law. This article challenges a key premise of those proposals: that upcycling is inherently environmentally beneficial. The environmental value of upcycling is neither uniform nor self-evident, and in some contexts may be marginal or even adverse. This uncertainty raises a normative question: should accommodation of upcycling under IP law depend on demonstrated environmental benefit, or does upcycling embody a wider social value warranting protection irrespective of ecological impact? The article argues for the latter, developing a justificatory framework grounded not primarily in environmental sustainability, but in artistic freedom and cultural diversity. On this account, environmental benefits – where present – serve as reinforcing considerations rather than the foundation for legal reform. Building on this reframing, the article reassesses concerns about free-riding on IP holders’ rights and argues for a more calibrated balance between upcycling practices and the protection of legitimate IP interests. It then examines how this balance might be realised within existing EU IP law, focusing on the underexplored potential of the quotation exception in copyright law and the ‘due cause’ defence in trade mark law. By repositioning these defences within the sustainability discourse, the article seeks to broaden the tools available to courts and policymakers for aligning IP law with the social value of upcycling.

Links

  • https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=6176840

Copyright, Freedom of expression, Trademark law, upcycling

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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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Institute for Information Law
Roeterseilandcampus, Building A, 5th floor
Nieuwe Achtergracht 166
1018 WV Amsterdam
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Institute for Information Law
P.O. Box 15514
1001 NA Amsterdam
The Netherlands

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