US freedom.gov and the EU’s DSA in a transatlantic fight over online speech

The transatlantic debate over ‘digital sovereignty’ is also, in a discrete measure, about whose rules govern online speech. In the EU, digital sovereignty has essentially meant building enforceable guardrails for platforms, especially around illegal content, systemic risks, and transparency, through instruments such as the Digital Services Act (DSA) and its transparency mechanisms for content moderation decisions. In Washington, the emphasis has been shifting toward ‘free speech diplomacy‘, framing some EU online-safety measures as de facto censorship that spills across borders when US-based platforms comply with the EU requirements.

What is ‘freedom.gov’?

The newest flashpoint is a reported US State Department plan to develop an online portal, widely described as ‘freedom.gov‘, intended to help users in the EU and elsewhere access content blocked under local rules, and it aligns with the Trump administration policy and a State Department programme called Internet Freedom. The ‘freedom.gov’ plan reportedly includes adding VPN-like functionality so traffic would appear to originate in the US, effectively sidestepping geographic enforcement of content restrictions. According to the US House of Representatives’ legal framework, the idea could be seen as a digital-rights tool, but experts warn it would export a US free-speech standard into jurisdictions that regulate hate speech and extremist material more tightly.

The ‘freedom.gov’ portal story occurs within a broader escalation that has already moved from rhetoric to sanctions. In late 2025, the US imposed visa bans on several EU figures it accused of pressuring platforms to suppress ‘American viewpoints,’ a move the EU governments and officials condemned as unjustified and politically coercive. The episode brought to the conclusion that Washington is treating some foreign content-governance actions not as domestic regulation, but as a challenge to US speech norms and US technology firms.

The EU legal perspective

From the EU perspective, this framing misses the point of to DSA. The Commission argues that the DSA is about platform accountability, requiring large platforms to assess and mitigate systemic risks, explain moderation decisions, and provide users with avenues to appeal. The EU has also built new transparency infrastructure, such as the DSA Transparency Database, to make moderation decisions more visible and auditable. Civil-society groups broadly supportive of the DSA stress that it targets illegal content and opaque algorithmic amplification; critics, especially in US policy circles, argue that compliance burdens fall disproportionately on major US platforms and can chill lawful speech through risk-averse moderation.

That’s where the two sides’ risk models diverge most sharply. The EU rules are shaped by the view that disinformation, hate speech, and extremist propaganda can create systemic harms that platforms must proactively reduce. On the other side, the US critics counter that ‘harm’ categories can expand into viewpoint policing, and that tools like a government-backed portal or VPN could be portrayed as restoring access to lawful expression. Yet the same reporting that casts the portal as a speech workaround also notes it may facilitate access to content the EU considers dangerous, raising questions about whether the initiative is rights-protective ‘diplomacy,’ a geopolitical pressure tactic, or something closer to state-enabled circumvention.

Why does it matter?

The dispute has gone from theoretical to practical, reshaping digital alliances, compliance strategies, and even travel rights for policy actors, not to mention digital sovereignty in the governance of online discourse and data. The EU’s approach is to make platforms responsible for systemic online risks through enforceable transparency and risk-reduction duties, while the US approach is increasingly to contest those duties as censorship with extraterritorial effects, using instruments ranging from public messaging to visa restrictions, and, potentially, state-backed bypass tools.

What could we expect then, if not a more fragmented internet, with platforms pulled between competing legal expectations, users encountering different speech environments by region, and governments treating content policy as an extension of foreign policy, complete with retaliation, countermeasures, and escalating mistrust?

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UK sets 48-hour deadline for removing intimate images

The UK government plans to require technology platforms to remove intimate images shared without consent within forty-eight hours instead of allowing such content to remain online for days.

Through an amendment to the Crime and Policing Bill, firms that fail to comply could face fines amounting to ten percent of their global revenue or risk having their services blocked in the UK.

A move that reflects ministers’ commitment to treat intimate image abuse with the same seriousness as child sexual abuse material and extremist content.

The action follows mounting concern after non-consensual sexual deepfakes produced by Grok circulated widely, prompting investigations by Ofcom and political pressure on platforms owned by Elon Musk.

The government now intends victims to report an image once instead of repeating the process across multiple services. Once flagged, the content should disappear across all platforms and be blocked automatically on future uploads through hash-matching or similar detection tools.

Ministers also aim to address content hosted outside the reach of the Online Safety Act by issuing guidance requiring internet providers to block access to sites that refuse to comply.

Keir Starmer, Liz Kendall and Alex Davies-Jones emphasised that no woman should be forced to pursue platform after platform to secure removal and that the online environment must offer safety and respect.

The package of reforms forms part of a broader pledge to halve violence against women and girls during the next decade.

Alongside tackling intimate image abuse, the government is legislating against nudification tools and ensuring AI chatbots fall within regulatory scope, using this agenda to reshape online safety instead of relying on voluntary compliance from large technology firms.

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Microsoft outlines challenges in verifying AI-generated media

In an era of deepfakes and AI-manipulated content, determining what is real online has become increasingly complex. Microsoft’s report Media Integrity and Authentication reviews current verification methods, their limits, and ways to boost trust in digital media.

The study emphasises that no single solution can prevent digital deception. Techniques such as provenance tracking, watermarking, and digital fingerprinting can provide useful context about a media file’s origin, creation tools, and whether it has been altered.

Microsoft has pioneered these technologies, cofounding the Coalition for Content Provenance and Authenticity (C2PA) to standardise media authentication globally.

The report also addresses the risks of sociotechnical attacks, where even subtle edits can manipulate authentication results to mislead the public.

Researchers explored how provenance information can remain durable and reliable across different environments, from high-security systems to offline devices, highlighting the challenge of maintaining consistent verification.

As AI-generated or edited content becomes commonplace, secure media provenance is increasingly important for news outlets, public figures, governments, and businesses.

Reliable provenance helps audiences spot manipulated content, with ongoing research guiding clearer, practical verification displays for the public.

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Reload launches Epic to bring shared memory and structure to AI agents

Founders of the Reload platform say AI is moving from simple automation toward something closer to teamwork.

Newton Asare and Kiran Das noticed that AI agents were completing tasks normally handled by employees, which pushed them to design a system that treats digital workers as part of a company’s structure instead of disposable tools.

Their platform, Reload, offers a way for organisations to manage these agents across departments, assign responsibilities and monitor performance. The firm has secured 2.275 million dollars in new funding led by Anthemis with several other investors joining the round.

The shift toward agent-driven development exposed a recurring limitation. Most agents retain only short-term memory, which means they often lose context about a product or forget why a task matters.

Reload’s answer is Epic, a new product built on its platform that acts as an architect alongside coding agents. Epic defines requirements and constraints at the start of a project, then continuously preserves the shared understanding that agents need as software evolves.

Epic integrates with popular AI-assisted code editors such as Cursor and Windsurf, allowing developers to keep a consistent system memory without changing their workflow.

The tool generates key project artefacts from the outset, including data models and technical decisions, then carries them forward even when teams switch agents. It creates a single source of truth so that engineers and digital workers develop against the same structure.

Competing systems such as LongChain and CrewAI also offer support for managing agents, but Reload argues that Epic’s ability to maintain project-level context sets it apart.

Asare and Das, who already built and sold a previous company together, plan to use the fresh capital to grow their team and expand the infrastructure needed for a future in which human workers manage AI employees instead of the other way around.

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Greece positions itself as a global AI bridge

The PM of Greece, Kyriakos Mitsotakis, took part in the India AI Impact Summit in New Delhi as part of a two-day visit that highlighted the country’s ambition to deepen its presence in global technology governance.

A gathering that focuses on creating a coherent international approach to AI under the theme ‘People-Planet-Progress’, with an emphasis on practical outcomes instead of abstract commitments.

Greece presents itself as a link between Europe and the Global South, seeking a larger role in debates over AI policy and geoeconomic strategy.

Mitsotakis is joined by Minister of Digital Governance Dimitris Papastergiou, underscoring Athens’ intention to strengthen partnerships that support technological development.

During the visit, Mitsotakis attended an official dinner hosted by Narendra Modi.

On Thursday, he will address the summit at Bharat Mandapam before holding a scheduled meeting with his Indian counterpart, reinforcing efforts to expand cooperation between Greece and India in emerging technologies.

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Reliance and OpenAI bring AI search to JioHotstar

OpenAI has joined forces with Reliance Industries to introduce conversational search into JioHotstar.

The integration uses OpenAI’s API so viewers can look for films, series, and live sports through multilingual text or voice prompts, receiving recommendations shaped by their viewing patterns instead of basic keyword results.

A collaboration that extends beyond the platform itself, with plans to surface JioHotstar suggestions directly inside ChatGPT.

The approach presents a two-way discovery layer that links entertainment browsing with conversational queries, pointing toward a new model for how audiences engage with streaming catalogues.

OpenAI is strengthening its footprint in India, where more than 100 million people now use ChatGPT weekly. The company intends to open offices in Mumbai and Bengaluru to support the expansion, adding to its site in New Delhi.

The partnership was announced at the India AI Impact Summit, where Sam Altman appeared alongside industry figures such as Dario Amodei and Sundar Pichai.

A move that aligns with a broader ‘OpenAI for India’ strategy that includes work on data centres with the Tata Group and further collaborations with companies such as Pine Labs, Eternal, and MakeMyTrip.

Executives from both sides said conversational interfaces will reshape how people find and follow programming, helping users navigate entertainment in a more natural way instead of relying on conventional menus.

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AI agent autonomy rises as users gain trust in Anthropic’s Claude Code

A new study from Anthropic offers an early picture of how people allow AI agents to work independently in real conditions.

By examining millions of interactions across its public API and its coding agent Claude Code, the company explored how long agents operate without supervision and how users change their behaviour as they gain experience.

The analysis shows a sharp rise in the longest autonomous sessions, with top users permitting the agent to work for more than forty minutes instead of cutting tasks short.

Experienced users appear more comfortable letting the AI agent proceed on its own, shifting towards auto-approve instead of checking each action.

At the same time, these users interrupt more often when something seems unusual, which suggests that trust develops alongside a more refined sense of when oversight is required.

The agent also demonstrates its own form of caution by pausing to ask for clarification more frequently than humans interrupt it as tasks become more complex.

The research identifies a broad spread of domains that rely on agents, with software engineering dominating usage but early signs of adoption emerging in healthcare, cybersecurity and finance.

Most actions remain low-risk and reversible, supported by safeguards such as restricted permissions or human involvement instead of fully automated execution. Only a tiny fraction of actions reveal irreversible consequences such as sending messages to external recipients.

Anthropic notes that real-world autonomy remains far below the potential suggested by external capability evaluations, including those by METR.

The company argues that safer deployment will depend on stronger post-deployment monitoring systems and better design for human-AI cooperation so that autonomy is managed jointly rather than granted blindly.

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Macron calls Europe safe space for AI

French President Emmanuel Macron told the AI Impact Summit in New Delhi that Europe would remain a safe space for AI innovation and investment. Speaking in New Delhi, he said the European Union would continue shaping global AI rules alongside partners such as India.

Macron pointed to the EU AI Act, adopted in 2024, as evidence that Europe can regulate emerging technologies and AI while encouraging growth. In New Delhi, he claims that oversight would not stifle innovation but ensure responsible development, but not much evidence to back it up.

The French leader said that France is doubling the number of AI scientists and engineers it trains, with startups creating tens of thousands of jobs. He added in New Delhi that Europe aims to combine competitiveness with strong guardrails.

Macron also highlighted child protection as a G7 priority, arguing in New Delhi that children must be shielded from AI driven digital abuse. Europe, he said, intends to protect society while remaining open to investment and cooperation with India.

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Australian fintech youX suffers major cyberattack

Australian fintech platform youX has confirmed a data breach affecting hundreds of thousands of customers. The company said it identified unauthorised access to its systems and is investigating the full extent of the incident.

A hacker claimed responsibility for the breach and shared a preview of 141 gigabytes of data from a MongoDB Atlas cluster. The exposed information reportedly includes financial details, driver’s licences, residential addresses, and records from nearly 800 broker organisations.

Over 600,000 loan applications across almost 100 lenders could be affected. The hacker threatened to release further tranches of data in stages, citing previous warnings given to the company.

YouX is engaging with regulators, including the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner, and notifying affected individuals. Partners such as Viking Asset Aggregation are working closely with the fintech to support stakeholders and manage enquiries.

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Google plans $15bn AI push in India

Google CEO Sundar Pichai said at the India AI Impact Summit 2026 in New Delhi that he never imagined Visakhapatnam would become a global AI hub. Speaking in New Delhi, he recalled passing through the coastal city as a student and described its transformation as remarkable.

In New Delhi, Pichai announced that Google will establish a full-stack AI hub in Visakhapatnam as part of a $15 billion investment in India. The facility is expected to include gigawatt-scale compute capacity and a new international subsea cable gateway.

The project in Visakhapatnam is set to generate jobs and deliver advanced AI services to businesses and communities across India. Authorities in Andhra Pradesh have allotted more than 600 acres of land near the port city for the proposed hyperscale AI data centre.

Reacting in New Delhi, Andhra Pradesh IT and HRD Minister Nara Lokesh welcomed the announcement and thanked Pichai for expressing confidence in Visakhapatnam. The development positions Visakhapatnam as a major AI infrastructure hub within India’s expanding technology sector.

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