The First Formal Investigation under the DSA Regime
The European Commission has launched a formal investigation under the Digital Services Act (DSA) against Elon Musk’s Twitter, now referred to as “X” in the context of this investigation. This marks the first significant enforcement action under the recently enacted
Recent Developments in the U.S. Legislature’s Fight Against Tik-Tok
TikTok, owned by the Chinese company ByteDance, has faced scrutiny due to concerns that the Chinese government could access user data. These concerns are compounded by Chinese laws that could compel companies based in China to comply with requests from
LegalTech – from Theory to Practical Applications
In a previous blog post, we explained what LegalTech is; a collection of technology solutions that help lawyers and laypeople interacting with the law to process, interpret, and use legal data. However, to understand the importance of the subject and
LegalTech: How Modern Technology Transforming the Legal World?
We have written on the blog several times about the challenges that the latest advances in Artificial Intelligence (AI) pose for lawmakers, as well as the details of many of the technologies that are now shaping our lives in one
How the DSA Aims to Protect Freedom of Speech – With Special Regards to Section 14. of the DSA. – Part II.
It is clear that the way social networking sites operate represents a unique concentration of power over the right to freedom of expression for billions of people. It has been pointed out that, through the self-serving interpretation of terms of
How the DSA Aims to Protect Freedom of Speech – With Special Regards to Section 14. of the DSA. – Part I.
The known shortcomings in the systems of online platforms stem in part from the (commercially understandable) decisions of service providers to prevent transparency and accountability in the operation of their services and to make it harder than necessary to research
Multimodality and General Artificial Intelligence – One Small Step for Humans, one Giant Step for Machine Intelligence?
Multimodal artificial intelligence has undoubtedly become one of the buzzwords of this year. Such development directions are usually accompanied by huge promises, such as that similar models represent a big step towards the ideal of Artificial General Intelligence (AGI). How
Epic v. Google: Why Does It Matter Who Decides Your Case?
The Epic v. Google case, a significant legal battle in the tech industry, reached a pivotal conclusion with a jury finding Google’s practices around its Play Store and Play Billing to be an illegal monopoly. This decision was made by
The (D)evil is in the Details? On the Minutia of Freedom, Truth, Objectivity and Moral Certainty on the Margins of Current Conflicts
News about beheaded babies, videos about massacre of civilians on a music festival, destroyed infrastructure and an inexhaustible information flow from media is confronting us with a disturbing trend of “institutionalized schizophrenia”. A phenomenon, characterized by a disconnect or inconsistency
János Tamás PAPP: The Red Lion Case and the Fairness Doctrine: Their Relevance and Application in Today’s Media Landscape
The Fairness Doctrine, once a fundamental policy in the United States media landscape, mandated broadcasters to present controversial issues of public importance in a manner that was honest, equitable, and balanced. Introduced by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in 1949,