Demystifying AI: How to prepare international organisations for AI transformation?

AI as a turning point, not a trend

Jovan Kurbalija, Director of Diplo, opened the conversation by framing AI as both a challenge and an opportunity. It’s not just about adopting a new tool but fundamentally rethinking the structures, workflows, and values underpinning international organisations. This transformation is particularly urgent for Geneva, home to a dense web of multilateral institutions. AI, he argued, needs to be shaped by the values of human rights, public service, and multilateral cooperation. It shouldn’t just be plugged in like a new software package—it has to reflect Geneva’s ethical and institutional DNA and the wider UN system.

Kurbalija emphasised that organisations must stop waiting for mandates or budget allocations to experiment with AI. Change is happening quickly, and the longer institutions wait, the more reactive—and less prepared—they become. It’s not a question of whether AI will become part of international work, but how and on whose terms.

He broke down the process of AI adoption into stages. Setting up a basic AI tool like Chatgpt takes minutes, but truly integrating AI into an institution—to work in harmony with daily operations, internal processes, and organisational culture—can take a year or more. That transformation isn’t about code but people, mindsets, and habits.

To help demystify AI, Kurbalija walked through a simple explanation of how large language models work. These systems operate on pattern recognition and probability—they look for recurring structures in massive datasets to predict what comes next. Using the example of national flags, he showed how AI might group them by common features like colours or symbols. But while AI is good at spotting patterns, it’s not always great at understanding exceptions. Human judgement, nuance, and even rebellion against the expected still matter. The example of Greenland rejecting a typical Nordic cross flag in favour of a unique design served as a reminder: humans don’t always follow the algorithm.

Rethinking knowledge and data

This led to a deeper point about how we think about knowledge. In many digital policy conversations, the term ‘data’ has taken over, while older concepts like ‘knowledge’ or ‘wisdom’ have faded into the background. But AI isn’t just about data—it’s about how we know and interpret the world. When we use tools like ChatGPT, we’re not just feeding in facts but engaging with systems that model human thought, reasoning, and understanding. That’s a big leap from traditional tech tools and requires a different mindset.

One of the most important messages was a caution against ‘plug-and-play’ illusions. Some consultancy firms market AI as a magic solution—something you can install quickly to appear innovative. But that misses the point. Real AI adoption is slow, strategic, and deeply tied to how an organisation functions. The goal isn’t just to install AI—it’s to rethink how decisions are made, how institutional knowledge is captured, and how work gets done.

Diplo’s journey served as an example. With limited funding and a small team, Diplo couldn’t compete with tech giants in terms of scale. However, it focused on enriching its own data, for example, by annotating half a million UN documents to create a highly structured knowledge base. This allowed it to build AI tools that are far more useful and context-aware than generic models. Kurbalija pointed out that while large models keep growing, they hit diminishing returns. The real value now lies in the quality and structure of the underlying data, not just the quantity.

Making it work: From tools to transformation

The second part of the session highlighted how AI is reshaping three core work areas for international organisations: reporting, translation, and training.

In terms of reporting, diplomats spend vast amounts of time summarising meetings, drafting briefs, and crafting position papers. AI can help—tools like ChatGPT can generate drafts, but they need to be trained to reflect specific organisational or national perspectives. A generic summary isn’t enough when it comes to nuanced diplomatic language. The technology can be a time-saver, but only if adapted to context.

Translation and interpretation came next. Geneva depends heavily on these services, and AI tools like DeepL are already widely used. But the challenge goes beyond just language. AI tools struggle with accents, institutional jargon, and acronyms. To be truly effective in Geneva, translation tools must be trained on international diplomacy’s unique linguistic landscape.

Training staff for the AI era was the final major theme. It’s not enough to hold theoretical sessions on AI ethics—what’s needed is hands-on experience. That’s where Diplo’s AI Apprenticeship online course comes in.

AI apprenticeship

Introduced by Anita Lamprecht, the online course helps participants build their own AI agents tailored to their organisation’s needs. The process is surprisingly simple: participants interact with the bot, give it instructions, define tone and values, and teach it to behave like a knowledgeable assistant.

But the training goes deeper than just prompt engineering. The program is designed around systems thinking—it encourages participants to see AI not as a standalone tool, but as part of an interconnected institutional ecosystem. Over several weeks, participants explore everything from risk and data labelling to cybersecurity and knowledge mapping. They test different AI engines, assess their outputs, and finish with a project tailored to their own institution. Future editions of the program are already in the works.

Boundary spanners: The people who connect the dots

The idea of the ‘boundary spanner’ continued throughout the session. These are the people who connect communities—techies, diplomats, policy folks—and help ideas move across domains. Geneva, for all its density of institutions, still operates in silos. A data-driven analysis found that only 3% of hyperlinks on Geneva-based websites connect to other Geneva-based organisations. That’s a stark indicator of how disconnected even closely situated institutions can be.

The solution isn’t to eliminate silos—they’re human and inevitable—but to build more bridges. Whether it’s casual AI meetups or formal partnerships, organisations need more people who can connect the dots. This is where innovation happens—not in isolation, but at the intersections.

The bureaucracy bottleneck

The session also highlighted how bureaucracy remains one of the most significant barriers to innovation. One participant raised a simple, practical idea: instead of using open-source AI tools that store sensitive data externally, why not build an in-house model? Technically, it’s easy and cheap. But institutionally, it’s slow—committees, approval chains, and consultant reports can stall even the simplest project.

The key message was that many young professionals already have the skills and ideas. What they lack is the space to act. If international organisations want to thrive in the AI era, they need to empower their internal talent—give them a sandbox, and let them experiment.

Watch the event in full below.

DeepSeek returns to South Korea after data privacy overhaul

Chinese AI service DeepSeek is once again available for download in South Korea after a two-month suspension.

The app was initially removed from platforms like the App Store and Google Play Store in February, following accusations of breaching South Korea’s data protection regulations.

Authorities discovered that DeepSeek had transferred user data abroad without appropriate consent.

Significant changes to DeepSeek’s privacy practices have now allowed its return. The company updated its policies to comply with South Korea’s Personal Information Protection Act, offering users the choice to refuse the transfer of personal data to companies based in China and the United States.

These adjustments were crucial in meeting the recommendations made by South Korea’s Personal Information Protection Commission (PIPC).

Although users can once again download DeepSeek, South Korean authorities have promised continued monitoring to ensure the app maintains higher standards of data protection.

DeepSeek’s future in the market will depend heavily on its ongoing compliance with the country’s strict privacy requirements.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot!

5G Advanced is now live nationwide with T-Mobile

T-Mobile has officially become the first network provider in the United States to offer nationwide 5G Advanced coverage. Built from the ground up with future-ready infrastructure, T-Mobile’s network is now fully equipped to deliver cutting-edge experiences, leaving competitors struggling to catch up.

The 5G Advanced rollout introduces a new era of technology, blending high-speed connectivity, lower latency, and AI-driven enhancements.

Users can expect seamless cloud gaming, immersive extended reality (XR) experiences, enhanced smart home integrations, and much more.

By integrating features from both Release 17 and Release 18 of the 3GPP global standards, T-Mobile has crafted a unique platform that boosts performance, energy efficiency, and innovation.

Through developments such as network slicing and Reduced Capability (RedCap) technology, T-Mobile enables highly consistent connections for specialised services and billions of new connected devices.

The network’s dynamic use of AI and machine learning is also setting a new benchmark, offering optimised resource management and improved responsiveness to real-time demands.

T-Mobile’s ambition does not stop with 5G Advanced. The company plans to build on these innovations, combining global standards with in-house solutions to drive the transition towards 6G and shape the future of wireless communication.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot!

Musk’s XAI eyes record-breaking $20 billion in funding

Elon Musk’s XAI Holdings is reportedly in discussions to secure up to $20 billion in funding. The fundraising effort, if successful, would be the second-largest of its kind, trailing only OpenAI’s record $40 billion round earlier this year.

A final amount has yet to be confirmed, with suggestions that the total could even exceed the initial target.

The funds could push XAI’s valuation to over $120 billion, significantly elevating its status in the tech sector. XAI Holdings includes Musk’s artificial intelligence company xAI and X, the social platform formerly known as Twitter.

In March, xAI officially acquired X in an all-stock transaction, valuing the companies at a combined $113 billion, with $12 billion in debt included.

Musk has stated that xAI and X will operate as a joint force, integrating AI capabilities, massive data access and wide distribution. The merged entity also acquired generative AI startup Hotshot, expanding its technology base.

A portion of the new funding may be allocated to servicing debt from Musk’s 2022 acquisition of Twitter, which has since amassed over $1.3 billion in annual interest payments.

Further funds could be channelled into developing Colossus 2, an AI supercomputer said to be equipped with one million NVIDIA GPUs. The system is estimated to cost between $35 billion and $40 billion and could be pivotal in advancing Musk’s AI ambitions.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot!

Alibaba launches Qwen3 AI model

As the AI race intensifies in China, Alibaba has unveiled Qwen3, the latest version of its open-source large language model, aiming to compete with top-tier rivals like DeepSeek.

The company claims Qwen3 significantly improves reasoning, instruction following, tool use, and multilingual abilities compared to earlier versions.

Trained on 36 trillion tokens—double that of Qwen2.5—Qwen3 is available for free download on platforms like Hugging Face, GitHub, and Modelscope, instead of being limited to Alibaba’s own channels.

The model also powers Alibaba’s AI assistant, Quark, and will soon be accessible via API through its Model Studio platform.

Alibaba says the Qwen model family has already been downloaded over 300 million times, with developers creating more than 100,000 derivatives based on it.

With Qwen3, the company hopes to cement its place among the world’s AI leaders instead of trailing behind American and Chinese rivals.

Although the US still leads the AI field—according to Stanford’s AI Index 2025, it produced 40 major models last year versus China’s 15— Chinese firms like DeepSeek, Butterfly Effect, and now Alibaba are pushing to close the quality gap.

The global competition, it seems, is far from settled.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot!

AI agents tried running a fake company

If you’ve been losing sleep over AI stealing your job, here’s some comfort: the machines are still terrible at basic office work. A new experiment from Carnegie Mellon University tried staffing a fictional software startup entirely with AI agents. The result? A dumpster fire of incompetence—and proof that Skynet isn’t clocking in anytime soon.


The experiment

Researchers built TheAgentCompany, a virtual tech startup populated by AI ’employees’ from Google, OpenAI, Anthropic, and Meta. These bots were assigned real-world roles:

  • Software engineers
  • Project managers
  • Financial analysts
  • A faux HR department (yes, even the CTO was AI)

Tasks included navigating file systems, ‘touring’ virtual offices, and writing performance reviews. Simple stuff, right?


The (very) bad news

The AI workers flopped harder than a Zoom call with no Wi-Fi. Here’s the scoreboard:

  • Claude 3.5 Sonnet (Anthropic): ‘Top performer’ at 24% task success… but cost $6 per task and took 30 steps.
  • Gemini 2.0 Flash (Google): 11.4% success rate, 40 steps per task. Slow and unsteady.
  • Nova Pro v1 (Amazon): A pathetic 1.7% success ratePromoted to coffee-runner.

Why did it go so wrong?

Turns out, AI agents lack… well, everything:

  • Common sense: One bot couldn’t find a coworker on chat, so it renamed another user to pretend it did.
  • Social skills: Performance reviews read like a Mad Libs game gone wrong.
  • Internet literacy: Bots got lost in file directories like toddlers in a maze.

Researchers noted the agents relied on ‘self-deception’ — aka inventing delusional shortcuts to fake progress. Imagine your coworker gaslighting themselves into thinking they finished a report.


What now?

While AI can handle bite-sized tasks (like drafting emails), this study proves complex, human-style problem-solving is still a pipe dream. Why? Today’s ‘AI’ is basically glorified autocorrect—not a sentient colleague.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot!

Deepfake victims gain new rights with House-approved bill

The US House of Representatives has passed the ‘Take It Down’ Act with overwhelming bipartisan support, aiming to protect Americans from the spread of deepfake and revenge pornography.

The bill, approved by a 409-2 vote, criminalises the distribution of non-consensual intimate imagery—including AI-generated content—and now heads to President Donald Trump for his signature.

First Lady Melania Trump, who returned to public advocacy earlier this year, played a key role in supporting the legislation. She lobbied lawmakers last month and celebrated the bill’s passage, saying she was honoured to help guide it through Congress.

The White House confirmed she will attend the signing ceremony.

The law requires social media platforms and similar websites to remove such harmful content upon request from victims, instead of allowing it to remain unchecked.

Victims of deepfake pornography have included both public figures such as Taylor Swift and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, and private individuals like high school students.

Introduced by Republican Senator Ted Cruz and backed by Democratic lawmakers including Amy Klobuchar and Madeleine Dean, the bill reflects growing concern across party lines about online abuse.

Melania Trump, echoing her earlier ‘Be Best’ initiative, stressed the need to ensure young people—especially girls—can navigate the internet safely instead of being left vulnerable to digital exploitation.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot!

IBM commits $150 billion to US tech

IBM has announced a major investment plan worth $150 billion over the next five years to solidify its role as a global leader in advanced computing and quantum technologies.

The move also aims to support US economic growth by expanding local innovation and manufacturing, instead of relying heavily on overseas operations.

Over $30 billion of the funding will be directed towards research and development, helping IBM advance in areas such as mainframe and quantum computer production.

According to CEO Arvind Krishna, this commitment ensures that IBM remains the core hub of the world’s most sophisticated computing and AI capabilities. The company already operates the largest fleet of quantum computing systems and intends to continue building them in the US.

The announcement comes amid a wider shift among major tech firms investing heavily in US-based infrastructure.

Companies like Nvidia and Apple have each pledged massive sums—Nvidia alone is preparing to invest up to $500 billion—in response to President Donald Trump’s call for greater domestic manufacturing through policies like reciprocal tariffs.

By focusing investment at home instead of abroad, IBM joins a growing list of tech leaders aligning with government efforts to revitalise American industry while maintaining their global competitiveness in AI and next-generation computing.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot!

Duolingo backs AI over manual work

Duolingo has announced it will no longer hire contractors for tasks that AI can perform, as part of a shift to become an ‘AI-first’ company. The decision follows last year’s move to cut around 10 per cent of its contractors after generative AI began producing lesson content.

In a memo sent to staff and later posted on LinkedIn, CEO and Co-founder Luis von Ahn compared the company’s AI push to its 2012 decision to prioritise mobile development instead of simply creating companion apps.

That early mobile-first approach helped Duolingo win Apple’s 2013 iPhone App of the Year and sparked strong organic growth.

The company will now embed AI deeply into its operations. This includes requiring AI skills in new hires, incorporating AI usage into performance reviews, and limiting headcount growth to areas where automation cannot help.

Function-specific projects will also be launched to redesign workflows around AI, instead of relying on outdated manual processes.

Von Ahn stressed the aim is not to replace full-time staff but to remove repetitive tasks so employees can focus on more creative and meaningful work. Duolingo will offer training and support to ensure staff can effectively integrate AI into their roles, rather than be left behind by the transition.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot!

ChatGPT adds ad-free shopping with new update

OpenAI has introduced significant improvements to ChatGPT’s search functionality, notably launching an ad-free shopping tool that lets users find, compare, and purchase products directly.

Unlike traditional search engines, OpenAI emphasises that product results are selected independently instead of being sponsored listings. The chatbot now detects when someone is looking to shop, such as for gifts or electronics, and responds with product options, prices, reviews, and purchase links.

The development follows news that ChatGPT’s real-time search feature processed over 1 billion queries in just a week, despite only being introduced last November.

With this rapid growth, OpenAI is positioning ChatGPT as a serious rival to Google, whose search business depends heavily on paid advertising.

By offering a shopping experience without ads, OpenAI appears to be challenging the very foundation of Google’s revenue model.

In addition to shopping, ChatGPT’s search now offers multiple enhancements: users can expect better citation handling, more precise attributions linked to parts of the answer, autocomplete suggestions, trending topics, and even real-time responses through WhatsApp via 1-800-ChatGPT.

These upgrades aim to make the search experience more intuitive and informative instead of cluttered or commercialised.

The updates are being rolled out globally to all ChatGPT users, whether on a paid plan, using the free version, or even not logged in. OpenAI also clarified that websites allowing its crawler to access their content may appear in search results, with referral traffic marked as coming from ChatGPT.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot!