Opening Plenary 2026 – Democracy: Stifled or Revived by Digital Disruption of the Public Sphere?

26 May 2026 12:30h - 13:15h

Opening Plenary 2026 – Democracy: Stifled or Revived by Digital Disruption of the Public Sphere?

Session at a glanceSummary, keypoints, and speakers overview

Summary

The panel examined whether digital disruption is eroding or revitalising European democracy, framing the debate with insights from a recent youth dialogue [30-34]. Claudia Luciani highlighted that governments in several member states are curtailing civil society, press freedom and using emergency powers, which together fuel democratic backsliding [46-50]. She added that rapid advances in AI and disinformation campaigns threaten elections by enabling fast creation and spread of fake content, while traditional media’s trust is eroding as audiences migrate to less accountable online platforms [58-60][61-68]. Luciani stressed that the pace of technological change outstrips existing safeguards, calling for a responsible transformation that aligns with human rights, democracy and the rule of law [51-53][55-57].


Felix Hlatky argued that a handful of profit-driven mega-corporations dominate the internet, using advertising-based business models that extract user data and amplify polarising content [78-84]. He presented Mastodon’s federated network of over 15 000 servers as a concrete example of how decentralisation can restore autonomy and local moderation in the public sphere [89-97]. Hlatky also noted that the speed of online lies makes timely correction difficult, underscoring the need for new moderation approaches [166-169].


Caroline Lindekamp warned that big-tech platforms exacerbate misinformation and that current efforts such as Meta’s fact-checking partnership and Google’s claim-review have yielded mixed results [112-120][124-126]. She described the European Fact-Checking Standards Network and its work on monitoring, data-sets and media-literacy programmes as essential for building a resilient fact-checking ecosystem [138-144]. Lindekamp further pointed out that many media-literacy initiatives are project-driven and underfunded, calling for sustainable financing and stronger support from European authorities [230-236].


In response to a youth question, Luciani affirmed that European institutions, through the new democratic pact and coordinated legal tools, have a central role in rebuilding trust and countering foreign interference [282-287][288-292]. She and Lindekamp both stressed that existing European regulations must be vigorously enforced to be effective [291-296]. The discussion concluded that safeguarding the digital public sphere will require coordinated policy standards, sustainable fact-checking infrastructure, and a shift toward decentralized, accountable online platforms [89-97][138-144][282-287].


Keypoints


Major discussion points


Youth participants’ assessment of the digital challenge to democracy – The young delegates see European democracies “struggling to keep pace with the current technological challenges” and stress the need for regulation of the tech industry, stronger media-literacy and fact-checking programmes, and civil-society involvement as a relay for awareness [30-34].


Key threats to democratic integrity in the digital public sphere – According to Claudia, the main dangers are disinformation, foreign information manipulation, AI-driven polarization, erosion of trust in traditional media, and the mismatch between offline rules and online platforms, with trust in news media averaging only 39 % [58-66][69-71].


The role and impact of the tech industry – Felix highlights that a handful of profit-driven mega-corporations dominate the Internet, shaping public opinion through advertising-based business models that amplify polarising content; he points to decentralised alternatives such as Mastodon and the broader Fediverse, which already host more than 15 000 active servers, offering genuine autonomy and local moderation [78-90][91-103].


Fact-checking, civil society and media-literacy as safeguards – Caroline explains that fact-checking is the “foundation” for combating misinformation, emphasising transparency, the need for sustainable funding, cross-sector collaboration, and extensive media-literacy initiatives for all age groups; she also notes the challenge of fragmented, project-driven efforts that lack long-term financing [112-124][230-240].


Institutional responses and the need for stronger European coordination – The Council of Europe is advancing a new Democratic Pact, setting standards (e.g., the Budapest Convention, the AI Convention) and planning extensive consultations; Claudia argues that European institutions must play a central role in rebuilding trust and coordinating actions against foreign interference, without creating new bodies [40-42][176-179][282-287].


Overall purpose of the discussion


The session was convened to examine whether digital disruption of the public sphere is undermining or revitalising European democracy, to integrate insights from the youth “dig” participants, and to identify concrete actions that policymakers, civil society, and the tech industry can take to safeguard the integrity of the European digital public sphere.


Overall tone


The conversation maintained a professional, collaborative tone, with experts respectfully building on each other’s points. Early remarks were descriptive and exploratory, while later contributions grew more urgent and solution-oriented as participants highlighted threats, funding gaps, and the need for decisive regulatory enforcement. The audience Q&A added a slightly more pressing tone, emphasizing accountability and the practical steps needed to restore public trust. Throughout, the tone remained constructive rather than confrontational.


Speakers

Speakers (from the provided list)


Florence Ranson – Moderator/facilitator of the panel discussion; guides the conversation and manages audience questions.


Felix Hlatky – Executive Director of Mastodon, the decentralized social‑media network; expertise in decentralized platforms, digital public sphere, and the impact of tech industry on democracy.


Claudia Luciani – Director of the Congress of Local and Regional Authorities, Council of Europe; specialist in democratic governance, local/regional authority issues, and digital transformation of the public sphere.


Caroline Lindekamp – Director for Fact‑Checking at Corrective; focuses on fact‑checking, misinformation/disinformation research, media literacy, and collaboration with platforms.


Audience – General participants and question‑askers from the public, including youth dig participants and other attendees.


Additional speakers


Camino Rojo – Mentioned as a scheduled panelist who could not attend due to illness; no role detailed in the transcript.


João – Audience member called upon to read audience questions; no specific title given.


Raina Goui – Audience participant who asked a question about building trusted digital infrastructure and ensuring inclusive trust.


Tilaka Shanmugavil – Audience participant who asked about integrating fact‑checking into cybercrime investigations to trace bot networks.


Mariam Kessetaya – Youth participant specializing in international law; raised concerns about the thin line between censorship and regulation and the role of European institutions in rebuilding trust.


Ms. Hoferichter – Referenced by Felix Hlatky when discussing language pluralism; no direct contribution in the discussion.


Full session reportComprehensive analysis and detailed insights

The session began with Florence Ranson reminding participants that the morning scenario would be repeated and that questions could be submitted in writing or live on-screen [1-10]. She introduced the panel-Caroline Lindekamp (Corrective), Claudia Luciani (Council of Europe) and Felix Hlatky (Mastodon)-and noted Camino Rojo’s absence for health reasons [13-22]. Ranson then shared the key take-aways from the recent youth dialogue, which highlighted young people’s perception that European democracies lag behind technological change, view profit-driven tech firms as threats, and consider regulation, media-literacy and civil-society outreach essential [30-34].


Claudia Luciani opened by applauding the youth contributions [37-38] and placed the discussion within the Council of Europe’s new Democratic Pact for Europe, a wide-ranging consultation that will diagnose democratic backsliding before moving to an operational phase [39-42]. She warned that several Member States are already curtailing civil-society activity, restricting press freedom and invoking emergency powers that bypass democratic scrutiny [46-49], thereby eroding the institutional checks and balances vital for a functioning democracy [50-51]. Luciani identified the main digital threats to democratic integrity: election interference, foreign information manipulation, coordinated disinformation campaigns and the rapid advance of AI that fuels polarisation and distorts electoral discourse [58-60]. While public-service media remain the most trusted news source, trust in traditional media is falling as audiences shift to influencers and platforms lacking democratic accountability [61-66]. An OECD report shows only 39 % of Europeans trust the news media, mirroring low confidence in government, prompting her call for a “healthy information ecosystem” supported by evidence-based communication [69-71]. She concluded that the solution is not to halt digital transformation but to steer it responsibly, respecting human rights, democracy and the rule of law [55-57].


Felix Hlatky described the tech industry as “very far-reaching and impactful” [78-79] and explained that a handful of profit-driven mega-corporations dominate the Internet through advertising-based models that harvest user data and amplify polarising content to maximise engagement [80-84]. As an alternative, he presented the federated, open-source ecosystem of Mastodon and the broader Fediverse, which now hosts more than 15 000 active servers [91-93]. Owning and administering a server confers genuine power and autonomy, allowing local moderation that reflects linguistic, cultural and dialectal diversity [94-108]; the European Commission and Corrective already run their own Mastodon instances, demonstrating the model’s scalability [98-100]. Hlatky also stressed the speed of online falsehoods-a lie can spread and become irrelevant within days-making timely correction extremely difficult [166-169].


Caroline Lindekamp shifted to fact-checking, asserting that major platforms such as Facebook, YouTube, Google, TikTok and Telegram amplify misinformation [114-119] and noting that the problem is worsening despite daily evidence from fact-checking organisations [120-121]. She acknowledged positive initiatives-Meta’s fact-checking partnership programme and Google’s claim-review-but observed that results are mixed, sometimes “noisy”, and insufficient to stem the tide [124-130]. Lindekamp argued that the fact-checking sector must become technologically independent, building its own tools rather than relying on platform-provided solutions [137-138]. She described the European Fact-Checking Standards Network (EFCSN), which unites over 60 European fact-checkers and works on monitoring disinformation, creating structured data sets, running media-literacy programmes and collaborating with scholars [138-144]. However, most media-literacy projects are short-term, grant-dependent and fragmented; she called for sustainable financing and a robust European journalism structure, especially as AI-generated summaries threaten traditional business models [230-242].


The conversation returned to trust. Luciani cited OECD data showing the police and judges enjoy the highest public trust while parliaments are the least trusted, underscoring the need to rebuild confidence in elected bodies [251-255]; she suggested civil society act as a relay, bringing awareness to local communities and bridging the gap between institutions and citizens [251-255]. Hlatky reinforced this with a “fire-brigade” analogy, arguing that moderation should be performed locally, with micro-decisions at the source of harmful signals-a model that mirrors the distributed nature of the Fediverse [166-169][266-269]. Both agreed that inclusive, multilingual engagement is crucial to prevent trust from being defined solely by large platforms [243-250][251-255].


When asked how European institutions might rebuild trust, Luciani confirmed that the Democratic Pact will conclude a broad consultation by year-end, gathering input from governments, civil society, youth and industry [282-286]. She outlined concrete steps: coordinating responses to foreign interference, developing anticipatory-governance scenarios and considering a legal instrument to tackle “phoenix” disinformation operations [287-292]. She argued that existing bodies-the Council of Europe, the EU and other European organisations-are sufficient; creating new entities would be unnecessary [293-295]. Caroline echoed this, stressing that Europe already has robust regulation (e.g., the Digital Services Act) but that enforcement must be “fierce” to be effective [291-296].


Audience questions addressed inclusive trust and the integration of fact-checking into cyber-crime investigations. Raina Goui asked how smaller language communities, youth and everyday users can be represented in trust-building mechanisms; Luciani reiterated the importance of multi-stakeholder consultations and local-level engagement [243-250][251-255]. Tilaka Shanmugavil inquired about linking fact-checking with cyber-crime probes; Caroline and Felix highlighted the need for open, structured data sets from fact-checkers and greater platform transparency to enable law-enforcement tracing of bot networks [260-267][266-269].


In summary, the experts reached strong consensus that digital disruption presents both risks and opportunities for European democracy. They agreed that safeguarding the digital public sphere requires (1) strong European standards and conventions-such as the Budapest Convention and the AI Convention [176-179]; (2) rigorous enforcement of existing EU regulations; (3) sustainable funding for fact-checking and media-literacy ecosystems; and (4) promotion of decentralized, locally governed platforms as viable alternatives to dominant mega-corporations [89-97][173-179][180-184][212-222][282-287][291-296]. The session closed with a reminder that coordinated policy standards, resilient fact-checking infrastructure, and a shift toward accountable, pluralistic online spaces are essential to protect democratic integrity amid rapid technological change [89-97][138-144][282-287].


Session transcriptComplete transcript of the session
Florence Ranson

No, rather, our opening speakers have set the scene. The time has come for our first exchange session with some of our experts. Now, we’re going to run the same scenario as we did this morning. And if you weren’t with us, I’m going to briefly run through it. As I said, you are very welcome and invited and strongly invited to ask questions from the room at the end of the session. Our colleague who’s here will be moderating questions online. So you send your question. You can either send your question in writing online or request the floor. And you will be intervening live on screen and on mic in the room as if you were with us.

So that will be the opportunity at the end of our discussion. But what do our experts think? That in terms of democracy, is democracy stifled by digital disruption of the public sphere or is it, on the contrary, revived? to discuss this essential background, please, or background question, please welcome our speakers. I’d like to welcome Caroline Lindekamp. She’s Director for Fact -Checking at Corrective. Caroline. And Corrective conducts investigations into mis – and dis -information anywhere but here. And joining her is Claudia Luciani. She’s Director of the Congress of Local and Regional Authorities at the Council of Europe. Welcome, Claudia. And joining us as well is Felix Hlatky. He’s Executive Director of Mastodon, the decentralized social media.

Good afternoon, Felix. Unfortunately, please do take a seat. Unfortunately, Camino Rojo, who was supposed to join us this afternoon, cannot because he is sick. We wish him a speedy recovery, of course, and sorry he cannot be with us. So welcome to you all, and I’d like to open this session with some input from our young participants. As you know, the last couple of days, the long weekend, was dedicated to youth digs, so that’s the youth dialogue. And as a backdrop to our panel discussion, I’d like to share some of the key outcomes of their exchanges, so that you can also comment on the outcomes during your intervention. So youth dig participants answered a series of questions and the general results.

This is really a very rough series of takeaways. We will have a session later on this afternoon which will go more into detail. But just… A rough series of takeaways. So it seems that our young participants think that European democracies are generally struggling to keep pace. with the current technological challenges. They mostly adapt, yes, but important challenges remain for those democracies. Our young participants also often see tech industries as mostly profit -driven, and they see them as a threat to democracy because of the huge influence they have and the way they spread mis – or dis -information. In terms of challenges and opportunities for policymakers, civil society, and industries, while they highlight that there are many opportunities for cooperation on projects and for a more global approach to issues of general interest, they also highlight the need to regulate the tech industry to avoid abuses.

They also highlight the need to regulate the tech industry to avoid abuses. They believe generally that there is a strong need for more literacy and education, in particular in relation to AI, and a growing need for fact -checking. finally they see civil society as a very useful relay for raising awareness of the challenges and opportunities that lie ahead so i’ll be happy to hear your comments on on these key outcomes during our discussion since our topic is directly linked to their input but how do you think we should or we can safeguard the integrity and the functioning of the european digital public sphere how do we safeguard democracy in particular the question and i’ll turn to you first Claudia because you have an extensive experience uh in in that particular topic and uh you have brought on worked on many uh topics related to democracy,so how do you see european democracies and and the digital public sphere generally fairing in the face of rapid technological advancements?

Claudia Luciani

Thank you. First of all, good afternoon, everybody. It is a true pleasure to be here and to hear the comments, starting with the comments from the young participants who are spot on, I must say. It is also a double pleasure to be here because Eurodig is indeed the partner for the Council of Europe, and it is the perfect place to exchange about the direction the Internet is taking us. I think it was already mentioned earlier, we certainly should look at both threats and opportunities. This is certainly what the Council of Europe is trying to do, and that is why our Secretary General has launched a new democratic pact for Europe that, among other things, I will come back to it later, wishes to consult very widely, including with civil society, with young people, with local governments, with businesses, and, of course, governments.

And European and outside of Europe partners to better understand what are the root causes of democratic backsliding. and also to be followed by a more operational phase in which we will try to seize on the opportunities that this transformative phase is affording us. But what are the threats? We have an annual report, a bit like a State of the Union report, that indeed has highlighted warring trends over time. So we can say there are trends, unfortunately. Some of them were mentioned earlier. Governments attempting to limit civil societies and people’s ability to operate freely, including online. Enactment of laws that curtail press freedom in a number of our Member States. The use of emergency powers to bypass democratic scrutiny, just to mention a few.

These actions, of course, have not only their heart in themselves, but they undermine institutional checks and balances that are, of course, essential with functioning democracy. So that is why we have been speaking about democratic backsliding and erosion of trust, a key word I think I’m sure we will use in the future conversation. These are happening whilst technological revolution is unfolding, driven by digital technology and artificial intelligence that move faster than democratic safeguards. So there is a disconnect in the time. It takes us also to remedy. However, of course, we’re clear the answer is not to resist this transformation. There’s no going back. The answer is to make transformation responsible in line with human rights, democracy, and the rule of law.

What are the main threats to democracy as we see them? First of all, there are threats to elections, foreign information manipulation, disinformation campaigns. And rapid advances in AI drive polarization and distort election campaigns. Anyone can create and transmit an online fake in seconds, undermining the integrity of the information space, which is essential for democratic participation and confidence in institutions. Public service media remains so far the most trusted source of news or people. Social media influencers are rapidly gaining prominence, notably among the young elders. So trust is moving to environments that were not designed with democratic accountability. And this is, of course, something important to note. Traditional media, the institutions we have relied on for democracy for so long, are weakened economically and often behave differently online.

The editorial line that is so crucial to hold in print often moves to a faster pace and a more reactive mode on a platform. So the norms that govern the broadcast. do not translate automatically to a feed. We cannot therefore assume that trusted institutions will remain trusted if rules that apply offline don’t apply online. And here I want to quote, because it is excellent, the OECD report that examines trust in institutions that shows there is only an average of 39 % of individuals trust news media, mirroring, unfortunately, the level of trust in the government. So their recommendation, for one, at least already to start with, to support a healthy information ecosystem and invest in evidence -based communication remains to us as crucial as ever.

And let me end this first round of threads with a philosopher, I’m sure you all know Hannah Arendt, who noted that the ideal subjects of authoritarian regimes are not so much those who are already convinced ideologically, but rather the people for whom the distinction between the right and the left is not so important. Pact and fiction? And the distinction between true and false no longer exists. Thank you.

Florence Ranson

Felix, turning to you, I’d like to focus on the role of tech industries, and I mean tech industries at large, whether it’s platforms, AI firms, or social media. How do you see the role of tech industries when it comes to actually safeguarding or undermining, depending on how you look at it, democratic integrity?

Felix Hlatky

Yeah, first of all, thanks also from my side for inviting me, and good afternoon, everyone. So to the question, what the role of the tech industry in this context is, the very first thing I would say is that the role of the tech industry is very important. The very short answer is that it’s obviously a very far -reaching and impactful role. So the slightly longer answer to this is that we face each other, we face a situation in today’s Internet where A handful of largely profit -driven mega corporations have captured basically the largest part of the Internet, and they are now through their business models obviously also dictating how communications in the public sphere is actually happening.

So this, strictly speaking, it does not only touch democracy and political topics, how public opinion is shaped, but it touches also other parts, of course, how commercial decisions are taken. And it was mentioned before also when you read about what Youth DRG found basically or observed. And this… One of these observations, largely the profit -driven way of acting, this has obviously transpired. not only to the youth, but to everyone most likely. And again, it’s probably a pretty natural consequence if the business model is advertisement, which is based on the extraction of user data and then selling it to advertisers. The result of this is obviously that content is largely polarizing. It creates more engagement and opinions that are maybe not natural to how we are.

They are surfaced in an algorithmically enhanced way. And there’s also the topic of centralization that I mentioned in the very beginning. And we may think that this is the only way, but there are other ways. And I hope that one of the ways is… how Mastodon and this part of the internet that we call the Fediverse or the open social web, how we have built that, that this can act as an alternative. I would argue that it’s a good example that decentralization and a different way of doing this can work, that it can work at scale. To put some numbers behind this, there’s currently more than 15 ,000 active servers that run software in this space. This is not only about Mastodon, which is more like a microblogging platform, but there’s also more like photo sharing ones.

And these 15 ,000 servers, this may sound very technical, and I know this is like a technical audience here largely, but it was previously mentioned. A server is owning a server and being able to administer it. This is like true power and autonomy in our space. It’s owning your small part of the Internet. The European Commission does it. They have their own Mastodon server. Also, Corrective does, as far as I know. It’s tied to a domain name, of course, but this goes further than that. It’s also about being able to take moderation decisions on your own. I think it’s especially important. Ms. Hoferichter mentioned the pluralism of languages. Obviously, this also includes dialects. It also includes culture.

There are different interpretations about facts. This is something that only in a truly decentralized social network, this can actually be brought down on a content moderation level. And this is what creates true power in a space. It’s something that does not exist anywhere else, and it’s an alternative that can work and that is growing. Thank you.

Florence Ranson

Thank you. Caroline, if I asked you the same question, how do you see the role of tech industries from your point of view, particularly in view of the concerns expressed by our youth dig participants and the degree of distrust that they mentioned?

Caroline Lindekamp

Yes, thank you very much for letting me bring the fact -checking perspective to the panel. I think we can all agree in this room, and we have said this over and over again, big tech industries plays an important role in amplifying the role of tech industries. the problem of disinformation and misinformation, and maybe we can even name it. We’re talking about Facebook. We’re talking about YouTube. We’re talking about Google. We are talking about TikTok. We are talking about Telegram and so on. And I think when I’m looking at it, like, as I said, from a fact -checking perspective, what worries me most is that the situation is getting worse and there’s evidence that it is getting worse.

There’s a lot of evidence, and fact -checking organizations in Europe and around the world are bringing evidence to this problem, like, on a daily basis, but actually platforms are retrieving from mitigating that problem on their own platforms. So, and we’ve seen that also, I mean, we’re in Brussels, so there’s regulation that still needs to be strongly enforced, and what can we actually see? So maybe let’s look at two more positive examples, also, again, from that fact -checking perspective. Many of you might have… I’ve heard of the fact -checking partnerships program of Meta, so where fact -checking organizations would publish their fact -checks on the platform. to address the problem where it actually takes place. And another one is from Google, which is a claim review.

And both examples actually have shown, like in the past year, we have seen that the platforms are retrieving from the efforts. And some of it has been very noisy. Others have been a bit more quiet. And I imagine that many of you in the room remember when Mark Zuckerberg announced the end of the fact -checking program, the third -party fact -checking program in the U .S., with a big announcement in January. Last year. But also since I think it’s a bit of a diverse crowd, how many of you do know claim review? Is that something that everybody here knows, or is this something that is new to some of you? No reaction. Show of hand.

You know it? Okay. So at least one person knows. So maybe this is representative. Who knows? But, sorry. it’s from youth dig so okay so and so actually kareem it’s just it’s um it’s a tagging system for fact -checking articles um which helps like identify fact -checking articles and with research engines to better spread facts around the internet and google has retrieved from financing that technology and that infrastructure and um the fact -checking organizations around the world are still using it um because we want to um we want to spread facts but the thing is with platforms retrieving from these efforts while the problem is getting worse um we i just get my notes i forget them anyway um we can see with what has happened over the past year how much the industry has actually impacted from political shifts and from individual organizations decisions so what can we actually learn from it.

I think what is important is that we build technology ourselves and that we try to become independent from these decisions. So in Europe we have more than 60 fact -checking organizations that are organized in the European Fact -Checking Standards Network, the EFCSN, also present in the room here if you’re more interested in knowing what is happening. And what we are doing as fact -checking organizations is we try to build like an ecosystem that is based on facts. So what we do is actually we monitor what is happening online, which disinformation, misinformation and information manipulation is spreading online and what can we do against it. Like the basis for us is journalism, but we also very much looking into monitoring to actually find out what is happening.

We are building structured data sets. We are doing media literacy activities. and we are also collaborating across different sectors with scholars, for instance, to provide an image of the problem there is. And I think if we want to go in that direction, what is important is that we support the ecosystem behind it. So the fight against misinformation is increasingly under pressure. So this is financial pressure, but it’s also hate attacks against fact -checking organizations. And it’s important that how can we actually strengthen that ecosystem. And the challenge is obviously we need a sound system that is also lasting over the coming years. And this is also since we are in Brussels, and currently there’s talk of the MFF.

We’re looking at how can we regulate platforms. And on the other hand, we also have to see how can we support the fact -checking industry, and also journalism in general,

Florence Ranson

Would either of you like to comment on a particular aspect of dis misinformation as a threat to actual democracy before I move on to the next question yes Claudia?

Claudia Luciani

I think it’s reassuring that there is so much thought put into this it is fundamental for democracy I mean we cannot we are here in a more tech oriented crowd but out there people are making choices based on lies and fakes and their personal choices their political choices and those matter a lot because we still live in governments that are elected through ballot boxes so we cannot emphasize enough how what you’re trying to do matters to the fundamentals, which is the elections, as I said. I think this is very important. So I’m very happy that there is so much investment, both, of course, technological and, of course, intellectual as well. One cannot emphasize enough importance of, as I said, telling truth from fake and being able to do that.

The young crowds are better at it, but the older sometimes have more experience. So there is an interesting cooperation to be built also. This is what we’ve noted in some countries where the ability to detect fake can be brought together by different generations.

Florence Ranson

Felix, do you want to comment on that particular aspect or maybe to the reactions of the public? To what they see online? I mean, because reactions are so quick, they’re immediate, they’re primary reactions. So very often there is not a time for reflection, like when you read an article in the press, for instance, in paper press. It’s more primary reactions. It’s more immediate. Can you react on that?

Felix Hlatky

Yes. The format itself, of course, as you correctly point out, it almost demands an immediate reaction. And what we see very strongly is that even if some clear what’s the difference from fact, a lie basically, is created online on social media, it happens so quickly and a couple of days later it doesn’t even matter anymore. Even if you call out the author of this lie basically, it has almost no value anymore because there are so many new events. So there’s clearly something in the format that makes it even more difficult to moderate.

Florence Ranson

Thank you. Now, we’ve looked at challenges and opportunities, but maybe Claudia, I’ll get back to you on this, because how do you think policymakers, civil society or industry should act, should respond, should react to the challenges and opportunities that lie ahead? What can they put in place? What can they do?

Claudia Luciani

Well, we do. At the Council of Europe, we are intergovernmental organization, so we work with governments. We also involve in our reflection, as I said, through this new pact, all the other actors. But there’s one thing we do and we have been doing for a long time, and that is setting standards and speaking about treaties. We started with the Transborder Television Convention, the Budapest Convention on Cybercrime, still a global reference 20 years on. And more recently, you’re probably aware, on a framework convention on artificial intelligence, human rights. Democracy and the rule of law, which is the first legally binding international instrument, which means that it can be exceeded by states that are not member of organizations.

So one thing we do pretty well. is and we will continue doing is setting standards that can expand the legal the european legal space beyond our borders this is a very specific um ability our organization has because it’s intergovernmental of course this is difficult in this area it’s extremely difficult because if you want to be effective in responding to abuses online you have to still keep a very careful balance between regulation human rights and freedom of expression that in many contexts are missing so weak safeguards may allow of course manipulation to spread while disproportionate restrictions can undermine the democratic debate so council of europe approach in this matter is provides as i said a framework a compass if you wish based on our key values to navigate these two tensions the tension between regulation and freedom so this is one of the things that the organization can do.

Florence Ranson

Felix, what do you think industry can do? You mean industry also Macedon is part of the industry or a bit and you know sort of partly?

Felix Hlatky

Yeah, so if you see industry more as companies, let’s say and companies they also have a special role to play because I mean first of all they are connected to selling things so again advertisement, there’s you know if you sum up all the budgets that are spent basically then you see the collective power that industry has, where it goes and what is done with with these revenues, this is it’s It’s basically the true cause why we face each other, why we face this situation that we’re in. But companies, they have also, of course, a different role because it’s not only about the advertisement and the money that is spent, but also the special relationship that they have with their customers.

Some customers, they have an almost emotional attachment to companies where they buy goods from. The public perception and how it can be shaped is a very strong and obviously unregulated way of creating connection and shaping public opinion.

Florence Ranson

And Caroline from your point of view what could be the role of civil society but also of tech industries in view of these challenges and opportunities?

Caroline Lindekamp

I think when we talk about what can we do against disinformation, we’re often talking about democratic resilience. So how can we actually build a society that is resilient against mis- and disinformation? And I think here civil society and also journalism play a super important role because what we do is like often we are asked that it’s said that fact-checking can be one pillar in the fight against disinformation and misinformation. I would say that it’s actually the foundation for any useful means against disinformation because what we do is one, we provide visibility of what is actually out there. You’ve been talking about standards and I mean one key standard in journalism and also in fact-checking is transparency.

And this is what big tech usually does do. We don’t know how the algorithms work. We don’t know what is happening on the platforms and even researchers are still having so much trouble of getting access to data from big tech. So I think it’s important to have a foundation for any useful means against disinformation. which would help us to design meaning. full answers to the misinformation problem. And what we do, especially as fact checkers, so a lot of our work goes into monitoring to show what is happening out there, what is the responsibility of big tech industries, and what can we do against it. it. So the next step is then when we do a fact check, often it’s said like, well, you do just one article, but there’s so many lies out there.

What is the meaning of it? Every well -written fact check article is like a small media literacy training because it provides a reader an impression of how credible information production is working. And then, of course, we see how can we disseminate our knowledge and our findings to a bigger audience. So we would do that through media literacy initiatives that can be designed for younger people, for younger audiences. But let’s not only think about the next generation. We also have programs going on in schools, in universities, for parents, for senior people, and so on. And then it is also about, we’ve been talking about technology. Of course, there’s big tech industry, but there are also a lot of very positive examples from the fact checking universe on how we are building AI -based assistant tools.

To speed our fact checking, to make fact checking more efficient. And also to make that technology available also to other actors. And I think it’s really like having all these different approaches together makes a difference and can help us to build like a resilient society. And maybe the last thing is also we’ve been talking about trust. And I think we can see kind of a divide between politics and citizens. And I think what civil society organizations can be very good at, and this is not only fact -checking organizations, but civil society in general, is actually reach out to the people, go to the people, get into the local to build trust and to have like a sound relationship to citizens to actually make a difference.

Felix Hlatky

Can I quickly comment on the topic of media literacy? So this is obviously an extremely important topic and what is especially important from, from our perspective, you know, from the social media perspective, is that media literacy is also potentially extended by by things like social media literacy. So very often we talk about basically the traditional media and the origination of pieces of media and how they are disseminated. And social media, it’s almost considered as, yeah, it’s kind of like just this distribution tool for the media. And we have to deal with what we have anyway. Either we do it via Facebook or Instagram or TikTok, and there’s different ways. And we need to analyze, of course, how this circles back to the creation of these media pieces.

But again, and I can’t stress this enough, that there is like a different way of dealing with social media, of owning. And I think social media are possible, not only exemplified by Mastodon, but others as well. And this is, you know… in a future where young people, but also older people, of course, they understand that social networks is something that can be owned, that can be taken under control. This is a hugely important point as an extension of the traditional definition of media literacy.

Florence Ranson

Thank you. Yes, Claudia.

Claudia Luciani

It is very interesting what you’re saying because I see that we’re in this effort to make sure that not only we look at Norse, but also at the environment where people operate, notably young people. We have all these efforts on media literacy, on trying to make sure that people can access the media world and the Internet, the different generations, but it is true what you’re saying. It’s not only the medium of transmission. If it has an intelligence, it can also be owned, as you said. So I find this particularly interesting. And this would be a space for collaboration because I find this very, very interesting.

Caroline Lindekamp

and maybe another addition also to the topic of media literacy i mean if we’re looking like like the fact -checking sector has been evolving since 2016 mostly where it’s really become like a distinct area in journalism to fight to fight disinformation so it’s now a decade and also like from an inside perspective i think it’s quite impressive on how fast um we have evolved and also um how keen we are on collaboration among each other but also into different sectors but the question is also i mean what are the challenges to the sector and also i think when we look at media literacy i think more or less all media fact -checking organizations also do media literacy activities but what we see with many of these activities they’re project driven because we’re depending on third -party funding which could be coming from european level which is a national level and it depends on which country you’re looking at so i think me coming from germany we are still in a comparably favorable context and there are the european nations where they’re facing even more problems when it comes to financing.

But the problem is, like, you know, when you have one media literacy initiative and another one coming out, I think we also need to look into the impact logic. And what the sector needs is sustainability. And sustainability comes through sustainable funding as well. And again, flagging, like, the European Fact -Checking Standards Network, who is very much advocating for these topics for the fact -checking community from Europe. But this also goes out a bit to the Commission. Like, how can we find ways to actually fund our ecosystem that it is sustainable, that we cannot only look, okay, what is happening next year, but maybe in a couple of years. But we really need, like, a sound structure for journalism in Europe.

And the question is, and I mean, this is not only journalism, but it’s also, like, the places where journalism is taking place. And the space is becoming very tight when we’re looking at AI summaries on search engines, which are totally… undermining also the business model of journalism. So there are so many challenges from so many different angles. And I think it’s also upon politics to just create the structure for journalism to exist.

Florence Ranson

Thank you, I think we’re highlighting more problems than actually finding solutions but I think they need to be brought into the debate as well I understand we have a question online so João, please

Audience

Yes, apologies first of all if I mispronounce the names but we have two participants that would like to pose a few questions I’ll read them but just to contextualize I do think that most of the ideas have been shared by you I still think that it’s worth at least a short reflection on them So the first one is from Raina Goui and the questions are as we work on building more trusted digital infrastructure how do we make sure trust includes the perspective of people most affected by these systems like smaller language communities, young people and everyday users and how can multi -stakeholder spaces like EURD keep trust from being defined mostly by platforms or industry?

I think we can take also the other participants. So the question was coming from Tilaka Shanmugavil. And the question is on bot networks, on social media, spread this information at scale. And the question is, how can fact -checking be integrated into cybercrime investigations to trace these sources?

Florence Ranson

Okay, so who wants to take maybe the first question? The fact that we need trust to apply to all and particularly the most affected minorities. Yes, Claudia, please.

Claudia Luciani

I’ll just go back to this very fact -based work by the OECD that looked at trust in institutions, political, by the local government, the administration, the media. And in fact, it is interesting to see that the most trusted institutions are the police, the judges. then come the uh civil servants the local governments and then there is a big step and uh exactly the governments the media and even less the uh the parliaments so you can see the parliaments that are the elected uh persons that we elect through our free will this is where we again i said it before uh that’s where we can express a change we can make things change that’s the least uh trusted uh so i think this is very important to the trust is is something that needs to be looked at at this in these different dimensions in order to be able to to tackle

Caroline Lindekamp

it yeah maybe europe is local um because also i mean the examples you just came up with you can see it’s also a question trust is also a question of proximity maybe um so i don’t know at correctee for example we have a collaboration um with local um volunteers fire brigades or with small citizen foundations that are very much functioning in the local. And of course, such approaches scale different than like a video online, for instance. But I think if we really want to build trust, I think it’s that we need to get into the local and towards the people, especially where they maybe don’t want us or where they wouldn’t come to voluntarily. And this, again, maybe goes back to building like strong networks across different sectors and also civil

Florence Ranson

And what about an integrated fact checking? Maybe the second question. I mean, you know, Felix, you’re very welcome to intervene on both as well.

Caroline Lindekamp

Yeah, again, here coming up with an example for Corrective, but we’re also we’re not the only ones following such examples. We’re very much looking into participation. How can we actually integrate citizens into fact checking? And this starts with like fact checking. Tip lines that most fact checking organizations have. in place so we ask people which misinformation or suspicious information do we actually spot spot online and then going into how really integrating them into fact checking and the next question is like i mean with the results with our monitoring results with the fact checks that we collect how can they be integrated into different approaches fighting this and this information um what you can see and there’s also like a big approach to the efcsn we build structured data sets of everything that we find and i think um to integrate these data sets like and the knowledge that we have gathered over the past years um can be can be a good way a meaningful way one also to do to maybe build new business models for fact checking still following um our our impact logic and at the same time also um like easy cross -sector collaborations to scale and i think that question was also related actually who spreads and disinformation online and we can see this of actors is that just as there’s like different motivations to spread misinformation that can be political but there are also economic factors um that can be a reason or maybe just like general general hatred um but again maybe also a small note to the platforms again if they would be more transparent on what is happening on their platform if they would provide access to the data we would have more knowledge about who is spreading this and disinformation it would be easier to trace those who are responsible.

Florence Ranson

felix um

Felix Hlatky

yeah so so echoing um a lot of things that that have been said already but um i think the the the firefighter example it it’s it’s a good one because because fire brigades they are usually um organized in a very local level and the same analogy could be made to our network infrastructure that it’s not this one mega network that takes one moderation decision on very difficult political topics and it tries to find one decision for the whole world but it’s like these local decisions, these basically micro decisions at the source of where these signals appear and it’s a system that is certainly not perfect, it still needs a lot of further investment and we’re very happy from all the funding that is coming from Brussels and also Berlin.

for us but it’s something that dealing with moderation and also with fact checking of course on the local level I think it’s the only way that it can actually work because it represents much better how society and also nature in a way is represented online.

Florence Ranson

Thank you. We have one question from the room there and I’m going to take only that one. There’s probably more but due to time constraints I’m going to take that question over there. Our speakers are around so maybe over coffee you can corner them. So I’ll take the question from the lady over there.

Audience

Thank you. First of all thank you for acknowledging me. My name is Mariam Kessetaya. I’m a youth participant this year and specializing in international law. What I wanted to emphasize was actually the follow up to what you mentioned. We mentioned institutions that to deal with fact -checking and misinformation, disinformation, and some of the legal regulations that help public institutions probably to deal with this. However, there is really a thin layer between censorship and trying to use these digital regulations and the legal basis to justify them. So my question is, like, actually this is the end result of this is this broken trust, right? So I want you to maybe think about do you think that European institutions can actually play a bigger part in rebuilding this trust?

Do you think that, and if yes, how this should be done? And also, do you think that existing institutions should take on this role or there should be, like, additional separate independent entities created for this? Thank you.

Claudia Luciani

Yes, a wonderful question. Thank you, because it allows me to place two points I didn’t manage to say. First of all, the answer is yes, of course, European institutions have a great role to play. This is beyond the initiative that I mentioned of a new democratic pact for Europe, which wishes through a very thorough in -depth consultation that we’ll be finishing at the end of the year, listen and hear from different parts of societies, governments, as I said, it’s a very large consultation. And what we have understood is that, yes, there is a role for European institutions. And let me give you a couple of examples of where we’re trying to respond in a meaningful way to very worrying trends.

We didn’t mention the foreign interference because, yes, there is a lot of disruption, there is a lot of fakes, but there is, I would say, even worse, there is organized attempts by… outside forces that are not there acting sometimes even with under criminal with a criminal basis to interfere in elections in media social justice public health so the damages to our societies are are very very deep and these are of a transnational character you have probably followed recent elections in some of the european states to note that the governments are taking action now governments are taking action but this action should be coordinated so to go back to your question yes our member states for instance the vast council of europe to look into the possibility of having an appropriate legal instrument uh to uh to tackle the question of phoenix you know the foreign interference and manipulation um this is one example another example where we’re trying to again uh see whether we can not only counter have a counter effect or you take protective measures but also embrace somehow the transformation that comes with technology and we are practicing more and more foresights so we we try to work with parliaments with civil societies with local governments and ask them to do what would be a sort of anticipatory governance scenarios of possible future where democratic frameworks will be stronger ecosystems will be innovative but also safe and this gives a way in a way helps strengthen our democracies and the role of everybody so yes european institutions have a role i don’t think you need to create a new one there are enough out there council of europe of course the european union there are many more and i also want to emphasize that non -european organizations also have a role to play everything we’re discussing doesn’t happen in europe it happens globally so we must absolutely keep in mind that actors can be reached out across the european borders.

Florence Ranson

Thank you. Caroline, Felix, a quick word on that particular question? Caroline, yes.

Caroline Lindekamp

Yeah, I think also because you’ve been talking about the global perspective, I must say when I’m around, I mean, there is obviously, I mean, there is a regulation in Europe. And I think when we’re talking about platform regulation internationally, you’re looking at Europe. And when I’m in a more international context, personally, I’m proud that we do have that regulation in Europe. But at the same time, having it is one thing. And the next thing is then enforcing it. And obviously, it’s not easy. But I think we really need fierce enforcement of the regulation there is.

Florence Ranson

Thank you, Felix. I think there’s a follow -up question. But I’m afraid we don’t really have time. So we’re going to have to cut here. Questions?

Felix Hlatky

I think I’m good.

Florence Ranson

Thank you very, very much for joining us for this session and for sharing your experience. Thanks a lot. so we’re now going to break for coffee for half an hour, a short half hour I’d like to invite you to be back in the room by 10 to 4 if possible because we have a surprise mini session for you just before we invite the executive vice president of the commission so go and enjoy your coffee and back in the room at 10 to 4, thank you thank you it was very interesting

Related ResourcesKnowledge base sources related to the discussion topics (16)
Factual NotesClaims verified against the Diplo knowledge base (3)
Confirmedhigh

“Several Member States are already curtailing civil‑society activity, restricting press freedom and invoking emergency powers that bypass democratic scrutiny, thereby eroding institutional checks and balances.”

The RightOn #3 discussion notes that some governments used COVID‑19 emergency measures to limit civil‑society and press freedom, and the Council of Europe Commissioner warned against restricting media freedom during the pandemic, confirming these trends.

Additional Contextmedium

“The main digital threats to democratic integrity are election interference, foreign information manipulation, coordinated disinformation campaigns and the rapid advance of AI that fuels polarisation and distorts electoral discourse.”

UN policy briefs and reports highlight AI‑driven disinformation, election‑related misinformation, and the broader threat of digital manipulation to democratic institutions, providing additional detail on these threats.

Confirmedmedium

“While public‑service media remain the most trusted news source, trust in traditional media is falling as audiences shift to influencers and platforms lacking democratic accountability.”

Research from the Reuters Institute shows social‑media platforms have overtaken traditional TV and news sites as the primary news source, indicating a shift away from traditional media toward influencers and non‑accountable platforms.

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Speakers Analysis
Detailed breakdown of each speaker’s arguments and positions
F
Florence Ranson
2 arguments136 words per minute1279 words561 seconds
Argument 1
Digital disruption can either stifle or revive democracy, so safeguarding the integrity of the European digital public sphere is essential.
EXPLANATION
Florence frames the central debate by asking whether digital disruption harms or revitalises democratic processes, highlighting the need for protective measures. She links this question to the broader discussion on how democracy can be preserved in the digital age.
EVIDENCE
She poses the question about democracy being stifled or revived by digital disruption and introduces the panel to discuss this issue [12]. She also summarises youth participants’ view that European democracies are struggling with technological challenges and that regulation and literacy are needed to protect democratic integrity [30-34].
MAJOR DISCUSSION POINT
Democracy and digital disruption
AGREED WITH
Claudia Luciani, Caroline Lindekamp, Felix Hlatky
Argument 2
Youth participants call for stronger regulation of the tech industry, increased digital literacy, and expanded fact‑checking to protect democracy.
EXPLANATION
Based on the youth dig outcomes, Florence emphasizes that young people see profit‑driven tech firms as a threat and demand regulatory action, media literacy, and fact‑checking to counter misinformation.
EVIDENCE
She reports that youth see tech industries as profit-driven and a threat to democracy, and they highlight the need to regulate the sector, improve literacy, and boost fact-checking efforts [32-34].
MAJOR DISCUSSION POINT
Youth‑driven policy recommendations
AGREED WITH
Felix Hlatky, Caroline Lindekamp, Claudia Luciani
F
Felix Hlatky
2 arguments111 words per minute1241 words666 seconds
Argument 1
The concentration of power in a few profit‑driven mega‑corporations harms democratic discourse; decentralised platforms like Mastodon can provide an alternative that restores local autonomy and moderation.
EXPLANATION
Felix argues that the current business model of advertising‑driven big tech leads to polarization and centralised control of public communication, whereas a federated network allows independent servers to make their own moderation decisions, fostering pluralism.
EVIDENCE
He describes how a handful of profit-driven corporations dominate the Internet, using advertising models that extract user data and create polarising content [80-84]. He then outlines Mastodon’s federated architecture with over 15,000 active servers that enable local ownership and moderation, citing examples such as the European Commission’s server [87-90].
MAJOR DISCUSSION POINT
Decentralisation as democratic alternative
AGREED WITH
Claudia Luciani, Florence Ranson, Caroline Lindekamp
Argument 2
Media literacy must evolve to include social‑media literacy, enabling citizens to understand and critically engage with content distributed through platforms.
EXPLANATION
Felix stresses that traditional media literacy is insufficient; people need skills to navigate the rapid, algorithm‑driven flow of information on social networks, which can be supported by decentralized tools.
EVIDENCE
He explains that media literacy should extend to social-media literacy, describing how platforms like Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok shape content creation and distribution, and argues that ownership of networks can empower users [212-222].
MAJOR DISCUSSION POINT
Expanded media literacy
AGREED WITH
Caroline Lindekamp, Claudia Luciani
C
Claudia Luciani
3 arguments149 words per minute1913 words766 seconds
Argument 1
Technological advances, especially AI‑driven disinformation, are accelerating democratic backsliding and threatening election integrity.
EXPLANATION
Claudia highlights that rapid AI‑enabled misinformation campaigns undermine trust in institutions and the fairness of elections, creating a mismatch between the speed of technology and democratic safeguards.
EVIDENCE
She lists threats to elections, foreign information manipulation, and AI-driven polarization that can undermine democratic participation [58-61]. She also notes that the pace of digital and AI transformation outstrips existing democratic safeguards [51-56].
MAJOR DISCUSSION POINT
Tech‑driven threats to elections
AGREED WITH
Caroline Lindekamp, Felix Hlatky
Argument 2
The Council of Europe’s comparative advantage lies in setting standards and conventions that guide member states in addressing digital threats.
EXPLANATION
Claudia explains that the Council’s historic conventions (e.g., Budapest Convention, AI framework) provide a legal backbone for tackling cybercrime, AI, and other digital challenges, and that this standard‑setting role will continue.
EVIDENCE
She references the Council’s work on the Transborder Television Convention, the Budapest Convention on Cybercrime, and the forthcoming AI framework convention as examples of standard-setting activities [173-179].
MAJOR DISCUSSION POINT
Standard‑setting role of the Council
AGREED WITH
Florence Ranson, Caroline Lindekamp, Felix Hlatky
Argument 3
European institutions must coordinate responses to foreign interference and adopt anticipatory governance to strengthen democratic resilience.
EXPLANATION
Claudia argues that coordinated European action, including foresight exercises and transnational legal instruments, is needed to counter organized foreign meddling and to prepare for future digital challenges.
EVIDENCE
She affirms that European institutions have a role, citing the democratic pact consultation, the need for coordinated action against foreign interference, and the use of anticipatory governance scenarios involving parliaments, civil society, and local governments [282-288].
MAJOR DISCUSSION POINT
Coordinated European response
A
Audience
2 arguments153 words per minute340 words132 seconds
Argument 1
Trust in digital infrastructure must reflect the perspectives of minorities, youth, and everyday users; multi‑stakeholder spaces should prevent platforms from monopolising the definition of trust.
EXPLANATION
The audience member stresses that inclusive trust‑building requires attention to smaller language communities and vulnerable groups, and that bodies like EURD need safeguards against platform‑centric trust models.
EVIDENCE
The question raised highlights the need to ensure trust includes smaller language communities, young people, and everyday users, and asks how multi-stakeholder spaces can keep trust from being defined mainly by platforms [243-250].
MAJOR DISCUSSION POINT
Inclusive trust building
Argument 2
Fact‑checking should be integrated into cybercrime investigations to trace bot networks that spread disinformation at scale.
EXPLANATION
The audience proposes that linking fact‑checking processes with law‑enforcement cybercrime work would improve the ability to identify and dismantle coordinated disinformation campaigns.
EVIDENCE
The second question explicitly asks how fact-checking can be integrated into cybercrime investigations to trace bot-network sources of misinformation [245-247].
MAJOR DISCUSSION POINT
Fact‑checking and cybercrime integration
C
Caroline Lindekamp
3 arguments170 words per minute2291 words807 seconds
Argument 1
Fact‑checking is the foundational pillar against disinformation, but its effectiveness is limited by the lack of transparency from big‑tech platforms.
EXPLANATION
Caroline argues that fact‑checking provides visibility and media‑literacy benefits, yet without algorithmic transparency and data access from platforms, its impact remains constrained.
EVIDENCE
She notes that transparency is a key standard in journalism and fact-checking, and that big tech does not disclose how algorithms work or provide data to researchers, limiting the fight against disinformation [191-196].
MAJOR DISCUSSION POINT
Transparency deficit in big tech
AGREED WITH
Claudia Luciani, Florence Ranson, Felix Hlatky
Argument 2
Fact‑checking initiatives are largely project‑driven and require sustainable, long‑term funding to maintain impact.
EXPLANATION
Caroline points out that many media‑literacy and fact‑checking projects depend on short‑term third‑party funding, making sustainability a critical challenge that must be addressed through stable financing mechanisms.
EVIDENCE
She describes how most media-literacy activities are project-driven, reliant on third-party funding, and calls for sustainable funding structures to ensure long-term viability [230-236].
MAJOR DISCUSSION POINT
Funding sustainability
Argument 3
Integrating citizens through tip‑lines and structured data sets can amplify fact‑checking impact and foster cross‑sector collaboration.
EXPLANATION
Caroline suggests that citizen‑reported tips and the creation of structured data repositories enable broader participation, improve traceability of disinformation sources, and support collaborative efforts across sectors.
EVIDENCE
She explains the use of tip-lines for citizen input, the building of structured data sets, and the need for platform transparency to better trace disinformation actors, emphasizing cross-sector collaboration [260-267].
MAJOR DISCUSSION POINT
Citizen‑centric fact‑checking
Agreements
Agreement Points
Digital disruption can both threaten and revive democracy; safeguarding the European digital public sphere requires regulation, transparency, and literacy measures.
Speakers: Florence Ranson, Claudia Luciani, Felix Hlatky, Caroline Lindekamp
Digital disruption can either stifle or revive democracy, so safeguarding the integrity of the European digital public sphere is essential. Technological advances, especially AI‑driven disinformation, are accelerating democratic backsliding and threatening election integrity. The concentration of power in a few profit‑driven mega‑corporations harms democratic discourse; decentralised platforms like Mastodon can provide an alternative that restores local autonomy and moderation. Fact‑checking is the foundational pillar against disinformation, but its effectiveness is limited by the lack of transparency from big‑tech platforms.
All speakers acknowledge that digital technologies pose significant risks to democratic processes and agree that protective actions-such as stronger regulation, greater transparency, and enhanced digital literacy-are needed to preserve democratic integrity [12][30-34][58-61][51-56][80-84][87-90][191-196].
POLICY CONTEXT (KNOWLEDGE BASE)
This view aligns with the EU Digital Services Act and the Code of Practice on Disinformation, which mandate platform transparency, regulatory safeguards and support for media-literacy initiatives to protect the digital public sphere [S52][S53][S49].
Media literacy, including social‑media literacy, is essential to empower citizens and counter misinformation.
Speakers: Florence Ranson, Felix Hlatky, Caroline Lindekamp, Claudia Luciani
Youth participants call for stronger regulation of the tech industry, increased digital literacy, and expanded fact‑checking to protect democracy. Media literacy must evolve to include social‑media literacy, enabling citizens to understand and critically engage with content distributed through platforms. Fact‑checking is the foundational pillar against disinformation, but its effectiveness is limited by the lack of transparency from big‑tech platforms. Trust in institutions is low; building trust requires education and media literacy across generations.
The panel repeatedly stresses that improving (social) media literacy is a key tool against misinformation and for democratic resilience, echoing youth recommendations and professional observations [32-34][212-222][230-236][251-255].
POLICY CONTEXT (KNOWLEDGE BASE)
The importance of media-literacy is highlighted in EU-US comparative studies and the EU’s Better Internet for Kids strategy, which embed media-literacy in policy responses to misinformation [S48][S49].
Fact‑checking is a core pillar in the fight against disinformation, but its impact is constrained without platform transparency and sustainable funding.
Speakers: Caroline Lindekamp, Felix Hlatky, Claudia Luciani
Fact‑checking is the foundational pillar against disinformation, but its effectiveness is limited by the lack of transparency from big‑tech platforms. Media literacy must evolve to include social‑media literacy, enabling citizens to understand and critically engage with content distributed through platforms. Technological advances, especially AI‑driven disinformation, are accelerating democratic backsliding and threatening election integrity.
All three agree that fact-checking provides essential visibility and education, yet its efficacy depends on transparent data from platforms and stable, long-term financing to sustain initiatives [190-196][260-267][266-269][156-158].
POLICY CONTEXT (KNOWLEDGE BASE)
Fact-checking is recognised as a key pillar in EU disinformation policy, but its effectiveness depends on platform transparency and dedicated funding, as discussed in the International Fact-Checking Network benchmark and EU fact-checking initiatives [S57][S49].
European institutions have a pivotal role in setting standards, coordinating responses, and enforcing regulations to protect democracy in the digital age.
Speakers: Claudia Luciani, Florence Ranson, Caroline Lindekamp, Felix Hlatky
The Council of Europe’s comparative advantage lies in setting standards and conventions that guide member states in addressing digital threats. Digital disruption can either stifle or revive democracy, so safeguarding the integrity of the European digital public sphere is essential. Fact‑checking is the foundational pillar against disinformation, but its effectiveness is limited by the lack of transparency from big‑tech platforms. The concentration of power in a few profit‑driven mega‑corporations harms democratic discourse; decentralised platforms like Mastodon can provide an alternative that restores local autonomy and moderation.
There is clear consensus that coordinated European action-through standard-setting, democratic pacts, and enforcement-combined with industry responsibility is essential for democratic resilience [173-179][40-42][291-296][182-184].
POLICY CONTEXT (KNOWLEDGE BASE)
EU bodies lead the development of digital standards (e.g., DSA, Digital Identity Wallet) and coordinate cross-border actions such as the East Stratcom Task Force, reflecting their central coordinating role [S52][S53][S51].
Similar Viewpoints
Both see decentralised, locally controlled solutions (federated servers, local volunteers) as ways to counter the dominance and opacity of large tech firms, enhancing trust and accountability [87-90][94-99][191-196].
Speakers: Felix Hlatky, Caroline Lindekamp
The concentration of power in a few profit‑driven mega‑corporations harms democratic discourse; decentralised platforms like Mastodon can provide an alternative that restores local autonomy and moderation. Fact‑checking is the foundational pillar against disinformation, but its effectiveness is limited by the lack of transparency from big‑tech platforms.
Both stress the need for inclusive, coordinated governance that incorporates diverse societal groups to build trustworthy digital public spaces [251-255][243-250].
Speakers: Claudia Luciani, Audience
European institutions must coordinate responses to foreign interference and adopt anticipatory governance to strengthen democratic resilience. Trust in digital infrastructure must reflect the perspectives of minorities, youth, and everyday users; multi‑stakeholder spaces should prevent platforms from monopolising the definition of trust.
Unexpected Consensus
Local, pluralistic approaches (decentralisation) are seen as complementary to coordinated European standards.
Speakers: Felix Hlatky, Claudia Luciani
The concentration of power in a few profit‑driven mega‑corporations harms democratic discourse; decentralised platforms like Mastodon can provide an alternative that restores local autonomy and moderation. European institutions must coordinate responses to foreign interference and adopt anticipatory governance to strengthen democratic resilience.
Felix advocates for technical decentralisation (federated servers) while Claudia emphasizes top-down coordinated standards; their convergence on the importance of both local autonomy and coordinated governance was not anticipated [87-90][282-288].
POLICY CONTEXT (KNOWLEDGE BASE)
Local-level digital governance frameworks like LOSI and regional paradiplomacy initiatives demonstrate how decentralized, pluralistic actions complement EU-wide standards and foster multi-stakeholder collaboration [S46][S47][S45].
Overall Assessment

There is a strong consensus that digital technologies pose both risks and opportunities for European democracy. Speakers agree on the necessity of regulation, transparency, fact‑checking, media literacy, and coordinated European action to safeguard democratic integrity.

High consensus on problem definition and broad policy directions (regulation, literacy, standards). Divergence appears mainly on the balance between decentralised technical solutions and centralized regulatory frameworks, suggesting that future policy will need to blend both approaches.

Differences
Different Viewpoints
Unexpected Differences
Takeaways
Key takeaways
Digital disruption poses serious threats to European democracy, including election interference, AI‑driven polarization and the spread of disinformation. Profit‑driven tech giants dominate the public sphere, using advertising models that amplify polarising content and limit accountability. Current platform self‑regulation (e.g., fact‑checking partnerships) is uneven, noisy and insufficient to curb misinformation. Decentralised alternatives such as Mastodon and the Fediverse demonstrate a viable model for pluralistic, locally governed online spaces. The Council of Europe’s standards, conventions and the new Democratic Pact provide a framework for safeguarding democratic values, but must be complemented by strong enforcement. Fact‑checking is a foundational pillar for democratic resilience, offering transparency, supporting media‑literacy programmes and building public trust across generations. Trust in institutions is low, especially in parliaments; rebuilding trust requires local‑level engagement, civil‑society partnerships and inclusive, multilingual approaches. Sustainable funding and long‑term support for fact‑checking and media‑literacy initiatives are critical, as many projects remain short‑term and grant‑dependent.
Resolutions and action items
Council of Europe will continue its broad consultation under the Democratic Pact to gather input from civil society, youth, local authorities and industry. EU regulators are urged to enforce existing platform‑regulation (e.g., Digital Services Act) more rigorously and ensure transparency of moderation algorithms. Support the development and scaling of decentralised social‑media infrastructures (e.g., Mastodon servers) as complementary public‑sphere spaces. Create and maintain structured, open data sets from fact‑checking organisations to aid cyber‑crime investigations and trace bot networks. Establish sustainable financing mechanisms for the European Fact‑Checking Standards Network and related media‑literacy programmes. Promote multi‑stakeholder collaborations that link fact‑checkers, journalists, educators, local authorities and tech companies on joint projects.
Unresolved issues
How to effectively integrate fact‑checking outputs into formal cyber‑crime investigations and trace the sources of coordinated bot networks. Specific mechanisms for guaranteeing that trust‑building measures include smaller language communities, youth and everyday users without being dominated by large platforms. The balance between regulation and freedom of expression: concrete criteria for proportionate moderation that avoid both over‑restriction and under‑protection. Long‑term funding models for fact‑checking and media‑literacy initiatives beyond project‑based grants. Whether new independent bodies are needed to oversee digital trust or if existing European institutions can fulfil that role adequately.
Suggested compromises
Adopt a hybrid governance model that combines central regulatory standards with local, micro‑level moderation decisions to reflect diverse community contexts. Encourage platform transparency and algorithmic accountability while allowing industry to retain some self‑regulatory mechanisms, provided they meet independent oversight criteria. Blend decentralised network adoption with continued use of mainstream platforms, leveraging each for different user groups and purposes. Balance enforcement of EU digital regulations with safeguards for human rights and freedom of expression, using the Council of Europe’s standards as a guiding compass.
Thought Provoking Comments
Claudia highlighted that “there are trends… Governments attempting to limit civil societies… enactment of laws that curtail press freedom… use of emergency powers to bypass democratic scrutiny,” and stressed that the answer is not to resist digital transformation but to make it “responsible in line with human rights, democracy, and the rule of law.” She also quoted the OECD report that only 39 % of people trust news media, and invoked Hannah Arendt on the erosion of the distinction between true and false.
She framed the discussion by linking concrete political backsliding trends with the rapid pace of digital technology, establishing a clear problem statement and a normative direction (responsible transformation). The Arendt quote added philosophical depth to the debate about truth.
Set the agenda for the whole panel, moving the conversation from abstract “digital disruption” to concrete threats to democracy and the need for rights‑based safeguards. It prompted other speakers to address trust, regulation, and the role of tech platforms.
Speaker: Claudia Luciani
Felix described the Fediverse as an alternative to the centralized mega‑platforms, noting that “there are currently more than 15,000 active servers… owning a server is true power and autonomy… the European Commission even runs its own Mastodon server.”
Introduced a concrete, technically grounded solution—decentralisation—that had not been mentioned before, shifting the debate from criticism of existing platforms to possibilities for structural change.
Opened a new line of discussion about decentralised governance and moderation, leading Claudia later to compare local fire‑brigade moderation with decentralized networks and prompting audience interest in alternative architectures.
Speaker: Felix Hlatky
Caroline pointed out that while platforms have fact‑checking programmes (Meta’s partnership, Google’s claim‑review), “the problem is getting worse… platforms are retrieving from these efforts while the problem is getting worse,” and argued that “we need to build technology ourselves and become independent from these decisions.”
She highlighted the paradox that existing industry‑led fact‑checking initiatives are insufficient, stressing the need for independent tools and ecosystems, and introduced the tension between regulation and self‑reliance.
Prompted deeper discussion on the limits of platform‑based solutions, leading to later remarks about sustainable funding for fact‑checking and the necessity of a robust, independent civil‑society ecosystem.
Speaker: Caroline Lindekamp
Claudia cited OECD trust data, noting that “the most trusted institutions are the police, the judges, then civil servants… the parliament is the least trusted,” emphasizing the trust deficit in elected bodies.
Provided empirical evidence that underpins the youth participants’ concerns about democratic legitimacy, shifting focus toward rebuilding trust in political institutions.
Steered the conversation toward concrete trust‑building measures, influencing later audience questions about how European institutions can restore trust and prompting Claudia’s later elaboration on anticipatory governance.
Speaker: Claudia Luciani
Felix observed that “the format itself… almost demands an immediate reaction… a lie spreads so quickly that calling out the author has almost no value after a couple of days,” highlighting the temporal challenge of moderation.
Identified a structural problem of the digital public sphere—the speed of misinformation—adding nuance to the earlier discussion about platform responsibility.
Deepened the analysis by introducing the concept of “information velocity,” which led participants to consider not just who moderates but how moderation can keep pace with rapid content cycles.
Speaker: Felix Hlatky
Claudia answered the audience’s trust question by stating that “European institutions have a great role to play… we are practising more and more foresights… anticipatory governance scenarios of possible future where democratic frameworks will be stronger, innovative but also safe.”
Provided a forward‑looking, policy‑oriented solution (anticipatory governance) rather than merely diagnosing problems, and clarified that new bodies are not needed—existing institutions can be leveraged.
Reoriented the discussion from problem‑identification to actionable policy pathways, influencing the tone toward constructive, institution‑based strategies.
Speaker: Claudia Luciani
Caroline highlighted the sustainability challenge: “Fact‑checking and media‑literacy projects are often project‑driven and depend on third‑party funding… we need sustainable funding and a sound structure for journalism in Europe, especially as AI summaries on search engines undermine the business model of journalism.”
Brought economic and structural dimensions into the debate, linking technological change (AI summarisation) to the financial viability of the media ecosystem.
Expanded the conversation to include the business model of journalism, prompting acknowledgement that regulation alone is insufficient without financial sustainability.
Speaker: Caroline Lindekamp
Felix used the fire‑brigade analogy: “moderation should be like local fire‑brigades… micro decisions at the source… this is the only way it can actually work because it represents how society and nature are represented online.”
Provided a vivid metaphor that made the abstract idea of decentralized moderation tangible, reinforcing his earlier points about the Fediverse.
Reinforced the decentralisation narrative, resonating with Claudia’s earlier trust discussion and encouraging the audience to envision practical, locally‑anchored moderation models.
Speaker: Felix Hlatky
Overall Assessment

The discussion was shaped by a handful of pivotal interventions that moved it from a broad, descriptive framing of digital disruption to a nuanced, solution‑oriented debate. Claudia’s opening set the stakes by linking democratic backsliding and trust deficits to the speed of technological change. Felix’s introduction of the Fediverse and the fire‑brigade analogy offered a concrete architectural alternative, while Caroline’s critique of platform‑centric fact‑checking and her emphasis on sustainable funding highlighted the limits of current industry responses. Claudia’s later articulation of anticipatory governance provided a policy roadmap, and the empirical trust data she supplied grounded the conversation in measurable realities. Together, these comments redirected the dialogue toward actionable, multi‑stakeholder strategies—decentralised infrastructure, independent fact‑checking ecosystems, and forward‑looking institutional frameworks—thereby deepening the analysis and setting a constructive tone for the remainder of the session.

Follow-up Questions
How do we ensure trust includes the perspective of people most affected by digital systems (smaller language communities, young people, everyday users) and how can multi‑stakeholder spaces like EURD prevent trust being defined mainly by platforms or industry?
Addresses the need for inclusive trust‑building mechanisms and safeguards against platform‑centric definitions of trust, which is crucial for democratic legitimacy across diverse communities.
Speaker: Raina Goui (audience)
How can fact‑checking be integrated into cybercrime investigations to trace bot networks and sources of disinformation?
Seeks practical methods to combine fact‑checking expertise with law‑enforcement tools, potentially improving the detection and prosecution of coordinated disinformation campaigns.
Speaker: Tilaka Shanmugavil (audience)
Can European institutions play a bigger role in rebuilding trust, and should existing bodies handle this or should new independent entities be created?
Explores institutional design and the balance between existing structures and the need for possibly new, independent mechanisms to restore public confidence in digital governance.
Speaker: Mariam Kessetaya (audience)
What sustainable funding models can support the fact‑checking ecosystem across Europe?
Highlights the current reliance on project‑based, short‑term funding and the need for stable financial mechanisms to ensure long‑term resilience of fact‑checking activities.
Speaker: Caroline Lindekamp
How can transparency and data access from big‑tech platforms be improved for researchers and fact‑checkers?
Calls for greater platform openness to enable effective monitoring, verification, and academic study of misinformation dynamics.
Speaker: Caroline Lindekamp
What is the impact of AI‑generated content summaries on journalism business models and media diversity?
Points to emerging AI tools that may erode traditional revenue streams for news outlets, requiring investigation into economic and democratic consequences.
Speaker: Caroline Lindekamp
How effective and scalable are decentralized social networks (the Fediverse) as alternatives to centralized platforms for democratic discourse?
Seeks evidence on whether decentralized architectures can deliver comparable reach, moderation capacity, and resilience against misinformation.
Speaker: Felix Hlatky
What role can local, micro‑level moderation and community‑driven governance play in combating misinformation?
Suggests that distributed moderation may be more responsive and culturally appropriate, but requires study of its efficacy and coordination mechanisms.
Speaker: Felix Hlatky, Claudia Luciani
What enforcement mechanisms are needed to ensure EU platform regulation is effectively applied?
Identifies a gap between legislation and practical enforcement, calling for research into compliance monitoring and penalties.
Speaker: Caroline Lindekamp
How can anticipatory governance and foresight scenarios be developed to prepare democratic frameworks for future digital challenges?
Proposes proactive scenario planning to align policy with rapid technological change, requiring interdisciplinary research.
Speaker: Claudia Luciani
What strategies can increase public trust in democratic institutions (police, judges, local governments, media, parliaments) in the digital age?
Based on OECD findings, seeks targeted interventions to raise confidence, especially in the least‑trusted bodies like parliaments.
Speaker: Claudia Luciani
How can policymakers balance regulation with freedom of expression and human‑rights protections in digital policy?
Addresses the tension between curbing harmful content and preserving fundamental rights, a core challenge for future legislation.
Speaker: Claudia Luciani
What is the impact and sustainability of current media‑literacy initiatives across generations and funding sources?
Calls for evaluation of media‑literacy programs’ effectiveness, scalability, and long‑term financing to ensure lasting democratic resilience.
Speaker: Caroline Lindekamp
How can structured fact‑checking data sets be integrated into broader anti‑disinformation tools and business models?
Looks at ways to operationalise fact‑checking outputs for wider use, enhancing coordination and impact.
Speaker: Caroline Lindekamp
What is the role of algorithmic amplification in polarization and election interference, and how can it be mitigated?
Seeks empirical study of how platform algorithms boost polarising content and potential technical or policy remedies.
Speaker: Felix Hlatky
What are the democratic implications of governments using emergency powers to bypass scrutiny in the digital realm?
Highlights a risk area where rapid legislative action may erode checks and balances, needing systematic analysis.
Speaker: Claudia Luciani
How effective are the OECD trust‑in‑institutions recommendations for European contexts, and what adaptations are required?
Calls for assessment of international guidance applicability to European democratic ecosystems.
Speaker: Claudia Luciani

Disclaimer: This is not an official session record. DiploAI generates these resources from audiovisual recordings, and they are presented as-is, including potential errors. Due to logistical challenges, such as discrepancies in audio/video or transcripts, names may be misspelled. We strive for accuracy to the best of our ability.