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PhD defence:

Building normative diversity into algorithmic news recommendations
by Sanne Vrijenhoek

1 July 2026
Conference:

2026 Annual Conference of the Society for Economic Research on Copyright Issues

6 & 7 July 2026

IViR Summer Courses 2026:

International Copyright
Law & Policy
European Platform Regulation

Latest News

19 June, 2026

Could AI break our news bubbles?

News

The dangers of AI are often highlighted. But how can we make technology work for us when we follow the news?
In her PhD thesis, Sanne Vrijenhoek examined how technology can strengthen the position of newsrooms. ‘Personalised news recommendations could also help people break out of their bubble.’

19 June, 2026

Nieuw rapport: Een minimumleeftijd voor sociale media: Juridische verkenning

News

Op 18 juni 2026 is een juridische verkenning gepubliceerd over de mogelijkheid om een minimumleeftijd voor social media in te stellen. Dit rapport is geschreven door dr. Paddy Leerssen en prof. dr. Joris van Hoboken.

11 June, 2026

Vacancy: Postdoc in geopolitics and governance of chip security value chains

Vacancy

Are you interested in exploring technology value chains and geopolitics through a law and political economy lens? Are you a self-starter, and do you have a critical and creative mind?
This postdoc position is part of an interdisciplinary project exploring chip-security in globalised value chains.

See all news

Upcoming events

June 25 - 28, 2026

ACM Conference on Fairness, Accountability, and Transparency (FAccT) 2026

Montreal, CanadaFAccT 2026 in Monréal
July 1, 2026

PhD defence: Building normative diversity into algorithmic news recommendations

  • PhD defence
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
July 6 - 7, 2026

2026 Annual Conference of the Society for Economic Research on Copyright Issues

Amsterdam, The Netherlandshttps://www.serci.org/annual_con…
October 29 - 30, 2026

PLSC Europe 2026

Leuven, Belgiumhttps://www.law.kuleuven.be/citi…
See all events

Latest publications

Panel at CPDP 2026: From AI and Quantum to EuroStack and Digital Commons: Which Way to Digital Sovereignty? external link

van Hoboken, J., Vogiatzoglou, P., Streinz, T., Paul, A. & Warso, Z.
2026
  • Abstract
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Abstract

As Big Tech controls most of the digital infrastructure on which everyday practices depend, digital sovereignty has emerged as a countervailing strategy to (re)gain control over data, technologies, and infrastructures, thereby safeguarding autonomy and self-determination in the digital era. The EU’s digital sovereignty agenda emphasises investment in sectors it considers critical, like artificial intelligence and quantum technologies. Industry and civil society also advocate for domestic alternatives to hyperscalers. The various digital sovereignty visions share commonalities; they highlight the need for European-based infrastructures that comply with EU digital rules, but raise similar concerns about underlying dependencies and geopolitical tensions. At the same time, they differ in the futures they imagine, from becoming a global leader to developing open-source solutions. This panel will investigate what digital sovereignty entails nowadays and the different pathways, from private to public digital infrastructures, towards achieving it.

Links

  • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G1hYPn17kH4
  • https://www.cpdpconferences.org/panels/from-ai-and-quantum-to-eurostack-and-digital-commons-which-way-to-digital-sovereignty

Artificial intelligence, Digital sovereignty, quantum technologies

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Building normative diversity into algorithmic news recommendations external link

Vrijenhoek, S.
2026
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Abstract

News recommender systems aim to predict which news items their users would like to read based on their past reading behavior. However, rather than only catering to a readers' preferences, a diverse recommender system could also be used to expand a reader's world view, to help them be more informed, or to expose them to events and ideas they were not aware of before. This dissertation therefore aims to answer the question: “How can we evaluate news recommender systems on their normative diversity?” The dissertation takes an interdisciplinary approach towards answering this question. It contains interviews with practitioners from public service media organizations in the Netherlands on how they conceptualized diversity in their recommender systems (Chapter 2); proposes new diversity evaluation metrics founded in democratic theory (Chapter 3); generalizes these evaluation metrics into a rank-aware divergence-based formalization (Chapter 4); analyzes the public datasets available for news recommendation on their suitability to diversity-based research (Chapter 5); and describes workshop sessions with a national news organization to collaboratively define evaluation metrics for their recommender systems (Chapter 6). The work shows that there is no one-size-fits-all solution to implementing diversity. Furthermore, it notes that it is fundamentally unlikely that abstract theoretical concepts can be perfectly captured in technical applications. Instead, it argues that we should aim for consciously imperfect solutions that are understood and accepted by all different stakeholders within an organization; to look for workable simplifications, rather than reductive generalizations.

Links

  • https://pure.uva.nl/ws/files/328320080/Thesis.pdf

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Een minimumleeftijd voor sociale media: juridische verkenning download

Leerssen, P. & van Hoboken, J.
2026
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Abstract

Juridische verkenning naar een minimumleeftijd van 15 jaar voor sociale media.

Links

  • minumumleeftijd_sociale_media
  • https://open.overheid.nl/details/898e8718-ffd4-4ed1-a754-438768373722

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Remuneration for AI Training: A New Source of Income for Journalists?

Senftleben, M.
In: The Cambridge Handbook of Media Law and Policy in Europe, Cambridge University Press , 2026, pp: 433-464, ISBN: 9781009568159
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Abstract

Generative AI systems threaten to usurp the market for human press and media productions. To enable journalists to act as ‘watchdogs’, highlight societal problems, and prompt necessary changes, remuneration rules should offer support for quality journalistic work by humans. In the EU, the rights reservation option following from Article 4(3) of the 2019 Directive on Copyright in the Digital Single Market – now flanked by the provisions of the AI Act – could support a remuneration system focusing on the use of human journalistic content for AI training. While AI training income would benefit media companies that own large repertoires of journalistic work, individual journalists might not receive an appropriate revenue share. This chapter suggests introducing a general output-based payment obligation on all providers and users of generative AI systems involved in media productions: both companies offering generative AI systems and companies using these systems in the media sector. Mandatory collective rights management could ensure payment directly to individual journalists, as in the repartitioning schemes of collecting societies. The remuneration could also finance funds that improve journalists’ working and living conditions. When distributing AI remuneration, social and cultural institutions could prioritise public interest journalism as a countermeasure to AI-generated misinformation and disinformation.

Links

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009568159.028

Artificial intelligence, Journalism, Media law, remuneration

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No News Is Bad News: The Role of Government in News Markets in the Age of Aggregators and AI

Poort, J.
In: The Cambridge Handbook of Media Law and Policy in Europe, Cambridge University Press , 2026, pp: 385-397, ISBN: 9781009568159
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Abstract

Welfare economic theory seeks the justification for government intervention in markets, in market failure, and in distributional issues. An analysis of the market failures that exist in a specific industry or market can not only provide justification for government regulation or other kinds of intervention in general, but it can also suggest which type of intervention or regulation is optimal from a welfare economic perspective. This chapter addresses the question of how the emergence of news aggregator platforms and the introduction of generative AI in news production have affected the market failures that constitute the core problem underlying private investment in news production. The focus of the analysis is on the public good character of news and the positive externalities of news production. The question addressed is: Have the consequences of these existing market failures become more prominent or have they been resolved by these developments? Based on this analysis, the chapter discusses how this informs policy concerning these developments.

Links

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009568159.025

Artificial intelligence, Government, Media law

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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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