G7 agrees on the first common principles on protecting children online

G7 digital ministers have agreed a shared set of principles for protecting children and young people from online harm for the first time, marking the first coordinated approach adopted by the group on the issue. The agreement, reached during talks in Paris, sets shared principles for addressing risks linked to harmful content, exploitation and the use of AI chatbots.

The principles call for stronger digital literacy, robust online safety practices by digital service providers and safety measures built into digital services from the start. The agreement also sets expectations for effective age assurance and closer cooperation between providers, children, parents and guardians.

Ministers also called for improved access to data and research on how digital services affect children’s well-being, including greater cooperation among platforms, researchers and families. UK Science and Technology Secretary Liz Kendall said: ‘The agreements we have reached today are an important step on that journey: outlining a shared approach to protecting our children, backing our small businesses to adopt AI, and ensuring AI is developed safely and responsibly.’

The G7 also reaffirmed its commitment to promoting trustworthy AI while continuing discussions on assessing and managing AI-related risks. Under France’s presidency, members agreed to continue discussions on a mutual understanding of AI risk assessment frameworks, including in relation to cyberattacks and chemical and biological capabilities.

Ministers also backed support for small and medium-sized enterprises to adopt AI through a tool developed with the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). G7 members also agreed a Vision on AI Openness and committed to further work on AI-generated content detection, secure AI systems, trusted data flows, and resource-efficient digital and AI infrastructure.

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Finland proposes rules for EU Cyber Resilience Act

The Finnish Government has proposed the approval of national provisions supplementing the EU Cyber Resilience Act, which sets cybersecurity requirements for products with digital elements.

The legislation will enter into force on 1 June 2026, with phased application aligned with the Cyber Resilience Act’s transitional periods during 2026 and 2027. The aim is to improve the cybersecurity of connected devices and software placed on the EU market.

The Cyber Resilience Act will be supplemented in Finland by a new national act on the cyber resilience of certain products and cybersecurity certification. The act covers supervision of product-related obligations, notification of conformity assessment bodies under the Cyber Resilience Act, administrative sanctions, and national provisions linked to the EU cybersecurity certification.

Market surveillance under the Cyber Resilience Act, along with the designation and supervision of notified bodies, will be assigned to the Finnish Transport and Communications Agency, Traficom. Market surveillance of high-risk AI systems will be carried out by the authorities responsible for supervising compliance with the AI Act, depending on the sector.

Conformity assessment bodies will be able to apply to Traficom from 11 June 2026 to be notified for assessment tasks under the Cyber Resilience Act. Bodies notified by Finland will be able to carry out conformity assessments across the EU member states within their area of competence.

Finland will also add a new chapter to the Act on Electronic Communications Services concerning the collection and disclosure of domain name registration data under the NIS2 Directive. The obligations will extend beyond .fi and .ax domains where the registrar or top-level domain registry is located in Finland, after a three-month transitional period.

The Government said the domain name provisions will complement Finland’s national implementation of NIS2 and improve the availability of registration data, making it easier to tackle illegal activity online.

Why does it matter?

Finland’s legislation shows how EU cybersecurity rules are being translated into national enforcement structures. The Cyber Resilience Act sets product security obligations at the EU level, but member states still need national provisions for supervision, notified bodies, sanctions, and certification. The added NIS2 domain registration rules also show how cybersecurity implementation is expanding beyond products into online infrastructure and data availability for enforcement.

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Anthropic launches Claude Opus 4.8 with improved reasoning capabilities

Anthropic has introduced Claude Opus 4.8, an upgraded version of its flagship AI model, with improvements across coding, agentic tasks, reasoning, and practical knowledge work.

The company said the model builds on Claude Opus 4.7 and is available at the same regular pricing. Anthropic also said that fast mode for Opus 4.8 can run 2.5 times as fast and is now 3 times cheaper than fast mode for previous models.

A key focus of the release is reliability. Anthropic said early testers found Opus 4.8 sharper in judgement when performing agentic tasks, more likely to flag uncertainty, and less likely to make unsupported claims. The company’s evaluations also found the model to be around four times less likely than its predecessor to leave flaws in its own code unremarked.

New features include dynamic workflows in Claude Code, available in research preview, allowing Claude to plan and run hundreds of parallel subagents in a single session for large-scale tasks. Anthropic said the feature can support codebase-scale migrations across hundreds of thousands of lines of code.

Users on claude.ai and Claude Cowork can also control how much effort Claude applies to a response. Higher effort settings are designed to improve quality for difficult tasks, while lower effort settings allow faster responses and slower use of rate limits.

Anthropic also reported stronger alignment results for Opus 4.8 compared with Opus 4.7. Its alignment assessment found lower rates of misaligned behaviour, such as deception or misuse of cooperation, and stronger support for user autonomy and user interests.

The model is available across Anthropic’s platforms, and developers can access it through the Claude API using the claude-opus-4-8 model name.

Why does it matter?

Claude Opus 4.8 shows how frontier AI competition is moving beyond benchmark performance towards reliability in professional workflows. Features such as effort control, dynamic workflows, cheaper fast mode, and stronger agentic task performance point to a market shift in which AI systems are expected to manage longer, more complex work in coding, research, analysis, and enterprise operations while giving users greater control over cost, speed, and reasoning depth.

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GCHQ outlines AI-driven cyber defence programme for protecting critical infrastructure

The UK’s signals intelligence agency GCHQ has announced plans to develop an AI-powered national cyber defence capability that would use autonomous software agents to identify and respond to cyber threats at machine speed. Speaking publicly, GCHQ director Anne Keast-Butler described the initiative as a ‘blueprint for a new national cyber defence capability’ to be operational within five years.

The programme would apply agentic AI to monitor and protect critical sectors including energy, water, healthcare, transport, and financial services. According to Keast-Butler, advances in AI are accelerating the discovery of software vulnerabilities, increasing pressure on defenders to identify and mitigate risks more quickly.

UK Security Minister Dan Jarvis had previously outlined the national cyber shield concept in April, noting that protecting critical infrastructure in an AI-enabled environment would require approaches beyond standard commercial security products. The Cabinet Office has since approached AI companies to contribute to the development of these capabilities.

GCHQ is separately integrating AI into its intelligence analysis workflows, including language translation and large-scale data processing.

Alongside the cyber defence announcement, Keast-Butler addressed two further technical priorities. On quantum computing, she noted that post-quantum encryption is now an active planning requirement rather than a future consideration, pointing to National Cyber Security Centre guidance on transitioning to quantum-resistant algorithms. On space, she observed that the volume of orbital infrastructure has grown substantially — over 10,000 new objects launched in three years — with GCHQ working to secure space-based systems that underpin data transmission globally.

GCHQ’s Mathematics directorate is developing new cryptographic methods suited to the post-quantum environment, building on the agency’s role in pioneering public-key cryptography in the 1970s.

Taken together, the announcements sketch a broader shift in how GCHQ positions its role. The announcements suggest a broader role for GCHQ, combining intelligence, cybersecurity, cryptography and infrastructure protection as part of the UK’s wider digital resilience strategy.

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Australian trial tests AI-guided radiotherapy for liver cancer

The Central Coast Cancer Centre in New South Wales is playing a lead role in a clinical trial exploring how AI can improve the precision of radiotherapy for liver cancer.

Led by the University of Sydney’s Image X Institute, the trial uses AI-powered X-ray imaging to track liver tumours in real time as patients breathe. The Central Coast Cancer Centre is the lead site for liver cancer in the study.

Current treatment practices often involve surgically implanting markers into the liver to help locate the tumour as it moves with the patient’s breathing. The AI tool maps and tracks tumour location with high precision, potentially reducing the need for invasive surgical intervention.

Liver tumours can shift during breathing, creating challenges for accurate radiation delivery. Researchers hope the technology will help indicate when clinicians need to intervene in radiotherapy delivery and, in future, support automated intervention during treatment.

Around 3,000 people are diagnosed with liver cancer in Australia each year, representing about 2% of all new cancer cases. NSW officials said early results from the trial are promising, but researchers are currently using the AI tool in a non-interventional setting.

The trial is supported by NSW investment in clinical trial infrastructure, with the state government providing A$5 million a year through the Cancer Institute NSW to strengthen clinical trial sites across New South Wales.

Why does it matter?

The trial shows how AI is moving into clinical workflows where precision, timing, and patient comfort matter. If validated, AI-guided imaging could reduce reliance on invasive marker implantation and improve tumour tracking during radiotherapy. However, the technology remains under clinical evaluation, so the policy-relevant point is not that AI has already transformed liver cancer treatment, but that public health systems are testing practical AI applications in treatment delivery.

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Digital citizenship education key focus at Council of Europe policy forum

The second European Forum on digital citizenship education has concluded in Strasbourg, bringing together policymakers, educators, civil society groups, youth organisations, and parents to discuss responsible participation in digital societies.

Participants examined practical approaches to digital citizenship education, with discussions focusing on AI in education, children’s rights online, critical thinking, inclusion, and safe participation in digital spaces. Particular attention was given to the role of parents and families in helping young people develop responsible and informed online behaviours.

The forum also contributed to preparations for the Council of Europe’s Road Map for strengthening digital citizenship education for 2027–2031. Stakeholders highlighted the need for closer cooperation between public authorities, the private sector, and civil society to support effective implementation.

Outcomes from the event will inform ongoing Council of Europe work to promote democratic values, human rights, and active participation in the digital era, while helping learners and education professionals respond to the growing influence of technology on society.

Why does it matter?

Digital citizenship education is becoming a strategic policy issue as societies try to ensure that technological change is matched by the skills needed for safe, informed, and responsible participation online. The Council of Europe forum links digital literacy with democratic participation, children’s rights, critical thinking, inclusion, and human rights-based digital transformation.

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China showcases AI innovation and global cooperation at World Intelligence Expo 2026

The 2026 World Intelligence Expo has opened in Tianjin, bringing together more than 700 exhibitors to present AI technologies, products, and application scenarios.

The four-day event is co-hosted by the municipal governments of Tianjin and Chongqing under the theme ‘Intelligence: Extensive Development Space, Sustainable Growth Driver’. It features seven exhibition zones covering embodied AI, core AI technologies, the low-altitude economy, commercial space exploration, and other emerging technology areas.

Chinese officials used the event to emphasise the integration of AI into manufacturing, industrial operations, and the broader digital economy. Ke Jixin, Vice Minister of Industry and Information Technology, said the ministry would advance the ‘AI+ manufacturing’ initiative, strengthen innovation capabilities, and improve the industrial environment for AI development.

A major focus of the expo is developing high-quality datasets to support intelligent manufacturing. Liu Liehong, head of the National Data Administration, said China would support industry leaders and pilot entities in building sector-specific datasets in areas including automobile manufacturing, shipbuilding, rail transit, non-ferrous metals, and petrochemicals.

The event also highlighted China’s interest in expanding international AI cooperation. Chen Jiachang, Vice Minister of Science and Technology, said China is making AI a priority in bilateral and multilateral technology cooperation, including capacity development.

Representatives from countries including the United Arab Emirates and Kazakhstan discussed potential cooperation with China across AI, advanced technologies, the digital economy, the internet of things, fintech, medical technology, and software.

More than 200 new products, technologies, achievements, and research reports are expected to be released during the expo, covering embodied AI, intelligent connected vehicles, the low-altitude economy, smart manufacturing, and smart living.

Why does it matter?

The expo reflects China’s effort to position AI as a driver of industrial upgrading, manufacturing competitiveness, and digital economic growth. The focus on sector-specific datasets is particularly important because data infrastructure is becoming a core part of AI industrial policy. The international cooperation messaging also shows how China is using AI events to strengthen technology partnerships and capacity-building ties, especially with countries interested in smart cities, fintech, healthcare technology, and digital infrastructure.

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UK and France launch AI partnership to transform health research

The United Kingdom and France have launched a science and technology partnership focused on applying AI, advanced imaging, and data science to major healthcare challenges, including women’s health, infectious diseases, and antimicrobial resistance.

The UK-France Strategic Biomedical Alliance in Health and AI will bring together institutions including the University of Oxford, Université Paris Cité, Institut Pasteur, Diamond Light Source, and Synchrotron SOLEIL. The partnership aims to make it easier for British and French institutions to cooperate on biomedical research, share expertise, and develop joint projects and funding bids.

The initiative will support research into conditions such as endometriosis and childbirth-related complications, while also improving the detection and treatment of infectious diseases, including tuberculosis, malaria, emerging viruses, and drug-resistant bacteria. Researchers will use AI, data science, and advanced imaging technologies to support earlier diagnoses, more personalised care, and improved preparedness for future health threats.

Alongside the biomedical partnership, the UK and France are strengthening cooperation in high-performance computing. Nearly £900,000 in UK government funding has been committed to a partnership between the Bristol Centre for Supercomputing, which hosts Isambard-AI, and France’s national high-performance computing body GENCI.

The collaboration is expected to give researchers at both centres access to advanced computing resources and support AI research and scientific discovery across multiple fields.

The UK will also contribute £300,000, matched by €330,000 from the French government, to support early-career researchers living and working in both countries. The mobility funding is intended to strengthen research collaboration, including on Horizon Europe projects.

Imperial College London and the French National Centre for Scientific Research will also sign a separate agreement to collaborate on metabolism research, covering health challenges including heart disease, cancer, and neurodegenerative disorders.

Why does it matter?

The partnership shows how AI cooperation is increasingly being embedded in biomedical research, advanced imaging, and high-performance computing infrastructure. By linking health research with supercomputing capacity and researcher mobility, the UK and France are treating AI as part of a broader science diplomacy and innovation agenda, rather than only as a standalone technology policy issue.

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OECD examines local conditions for trustworthy AI transition

The OECD is advancing work on AI and the local conditions needed for a trustworthy, ethical, and sustainable transition, focusing on how countries, regions, and cities can develop AI solutions adapted to local needs.

The project, ‘Seizing the full potential of AI: the local factor’, examines how AI is affecting business functions, public governance, jobs, labour markets, and regional economies. The OECD says generative AI has lowered some barriers to adoption by enabling the use of pre-trained models, but uptake remains uneven across places, people, and firms.

The organisation links stronger AI adoption to innovation-leading regions, especially global technology hubs connected to specialised knowledge networks and global value chains. Regions with weaker innovation performance appear to use AI less and adopt it more slowly, while workforce skills act as both an enabler and a barrier to adoption.

The OECD warns that uneven diffusion could affect competitiveness and territorial cohesion, particularly because technology gaps can be difficult to close once they widen. Businesses, regional governments, and cities also face challenges in integrating AI into legacy systems, adapting labour markets, revising skills and employment policies, financing the transition, and managing risks linked to employment, the environment, land use, and natural resources.

The project focuses on place-based AI strategies, local employment and skills needs, regional development policy, and smart and inclusive cities. Its work aims to help national and subnational policymakers assess AI readiness, strengthen stakeholder engagement, and build the policy capacity needed to support broader AI diffusion.

Why does it matter?

The OECD’s work highlights a key risk in AI adoption: technological divides may become territorial divides. If leading innovation hubs move faster while weaker regions lack skills, infrastructure, financing, or institutional capacity, AI could widen gaps in competitiveness, public service quality, and labour market outcomes. Place-based AI strategies can help policymakers tailor adoption, skills, and investment policies to local conditions rather than relying on one-size-fits-all national approaches.

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Digital Networks Act debate heads to Florence

A conference at the European University Institute in Florence will examine the proposed Digital Networks Act and its implications for the EU regulatory framework for electronic communications.

The event, titled ‘Digital Networks Act for a competitive and secure Europe’, will take place on 28 and 29 May 2026 at the EUI campus and online. It will bring together policymakers, regulators, industry representatives, and academics to assess how the proposal could reshape digital network governance in Europe.

The conference will focus on the Digital Networks Act as a shift from the existing directive-based telecom regime to a directly applicable regulation. Discussions will examine how the proposal could constrain national discretion, centralise selected decisions at the EU level, reduce implementation delays, and address regulatory fragmentation affecting the digital single market.

The proposed Act would repeal and consolidate several core EU telecom instruments, including the European Electronic Communications Code, the BEREC Regulation, the Radio Spectrum Policy Programme, and selected provisions of the Open Internet Regulation and the ePrivacy Directive.

The event will place the proposal in the context of the Commission’s 2023 exploratory consultation on the future of the electronic communications sector, the 2024 White Paper on Europe’s digital infrastructure needs, the 2025 Call for Evidence, and wider debates on competitiveness, resilience, scale, and Europe’s digital economy.

Speakers will also discuss delays in transposing the European Electronic Communications Code, which was due by December 2020 but was fully transposed across all the EU member states only in 2024. The delays are presented as an example of the limits of a directive-based approach, particularly for spectrum assignment, 5G deployment, and convergence with cloud, edge, and AI-enabled infrastructure.

Across keynote addresses and thematic panels, participants will examine access regulation, symmetric and asymmetric remedies, copper switch-off, spectrum and satellite governance, market structure and consolidation, and resilience in digital networks.

Why does it matter?

The conference reflects the growing importance of the Digital Networks Act debate for Europe’s connectivity and digital infrastructure agenda. Moving from a directive-based telecom framework to a directly applicable regulation could shift more decisions to the EU level, reduce national divergence, and reshape how Europe governs spectrum, access regulation, network resilience, satellite connectivity, and future infrastructure linked to cloud, edge, and AI.

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