More Than Half the Internet Is Machines – What Automated Traffic Means for Credibility and Public Discourse (Part II.)
From this perspective, it becomes clearer why so-called inauthentic use appears as a distinct risk category in the European Union’s Digital Services Act. Fake accounts, automated or partially automated behaviors, and artificially amplified distribution patterns are not singled out because
Artificial Intelligence and Fundamental Rights: A Multidimensional Legal Perspective is Needed
The implementation of Artificial Intelligence in managerial contexts represents a significant transformation that raises deeply complex questions from a contemporary legal and constitutional perspective. Although technology is frequently presented as a neutral tool for productive optimization and increasing organizational efficiency,
More Than Half the Internet Is Machines – What Automated Traffic Means for Credibility and Public Discourse (Part I.)
When a majority of online activity is produced by automated systems, the question is no longer whether bots exist, but what kind of internet we are actually using. The “dead internet” idea captures this unease, even if its more extreme
Unequal Membership? The Debate over Limited Voting Rights in EU Accession
The post explores the debate over limiting the voting rights of Member States joining the European Union during its enlargement. Although under the EU’s founding treaties, new members receive full rights upon accession, a new proposal suggests that the veto