France enforces new EU crypto rules under MiCA

France has entered a new phase of crypto regulation as the transitional period between its national Pacte law framework and the EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) Regulation has ended. Since 2 July 2026, crypto-asset service providers operating in France must comply with MiCA requirements and obtain authorisation to offer services across the European Union.

The Autorité des Marchés Financiers (AMF) has supported firms throughout the transition while reviewing MiCA authorisation applications. France has authorised 31 crypto-asset service providers, making it the EU’s second-largest jurisdiction for approved firms.

MiCA introduces stricter requirements on investor protection, security, market integrity and the custody of crypto-assets. The AMF will continue supervising authorised providers and assessing new applications.

The regulator will also work with the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) and other national authorities to oversee the orderly withdrawal of firms that failed to obtain MiCA authorisation. It has urged investors to use only authorised crypto-asset service providers operating under the new European framework.

Why does it matter?

France’s transition marks another step in MiCA‘s move from legislation to implementation. As national transitional regimes end, crypto firms across the EU must comply with a single regulatory framework, replacing fragmented national approaches with common licensing and supervisory standards.

The new regime is also intended to strengthen consumer confidence by introducing harmonised rules on investor protection, market integrity and operational resilience. Its long-term success will depend on whether it can provide effective oversight while allowing compliant firms to innovate and compete across the EU’s single market.

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

South Korea opens antitrust proceedings over Google app market practices

South Korea’s Fair Trade Commission has begun formal deliberation procedures over allegations that Google abused its dominant position in the Android app market.

The case follows an examiner’s report submitted to the Commission, which outlines suspected violations of the country’s Fair Trade Act.

According to the report, Google used its Games/Google Velocity Program, known internally as Project Hug, to provide financial support for services such as Google Cloud, Google Ads and YouTube.

In return, participating game developers were allegedly required to launch games on Google’s app marketplace on terms at least as favourable as those offered to rival platforms.

The examiner concluded that the programme reduced incentives for developers to distribute games through competing app marketplaces, including ONE store, while strengthening Google’s position in the Android app ecosystem.

The allegedly affected revenue was estimated at 14.16 trillion won, or about $9.1 billion. If violations are confirmed, potential penalties could reach up to 6% of that amount.

Google will have an opportunity to respond before the Commission reaches a final decision.

The case adds to wider global scrutiny of app-store competition and the ways dominant platforms use developer incentives, contracts and ecosystem services to shape market access.

Why does it matter?

The case shows how antitrust scrutiny of app stores is expanding beyond commission fees and payment systems into developer incentive programmes and platform-service bundles. If KFTC confirms the allegations, the decision could influence how dominant platforms structure support packages for developers and whether such programmes are treated as loyalty-inducing conduct. It also reinforces South Korea’s role as an active jurisdiction in digital-platform competition enforcement.

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

ECB researchers use LLMs to measure geoeconomic tension

The European Central Bank (ECB) researchers have published a working paper introducing a Large Language Model-based method for measuring geopolitical and geoeconomic tensions in the euro area.

The paper develops the LLM Geoeconomic and Geopolitical Tension index, or LGPT, using a large dataset of European newspaper articles in local languages.

Researchers analysed almost 20 million articles from newspapers in France, Germany, Italy and Spain, covering the period from 1999 to 2025.

The methodology combines a fine-tuned multilingual BERT model with GPT-4o in a two-stage classification process.

BERT is used to filter articles likely to relate to geopolitical or geoeconomic tension, while GPT-4o classifies relevant articles and extracts structured information.

The index distinguishes narrower geopolitical tensions from geoeconomic tensions, including economic policy or the use of resources for geopolitical purposes.

It also breaks geoeconomic tension into four sources: trade, energy, finance and technology.

The authors argue that the multilingual LLM approach can capture nuance that dictionary-based methods may miss, while providing more granular data for economic analysis.

They also show how the index can be integrated into macroeconomic modelling to assess the effects of geoeconomic tensions on output and inflation in the euro area.

Why does it matter?

The paper shows how LLMs can be used as analytical tools for economic policymaking, not only as chatbots or productivity software. Measuring geoeconomic tension more precisely matters because trade conflict, energy security, financial fragmentation and technology restrictions can affect inflation, output and financial stability in different ways. A multilingual approach is especially relevant for the euro area because it captures local-language reporting from major member states rather than relying only on English-language media or keyword lists.

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

Australia’s National AI Centre lists Microsoft Copilot training sessions for workers

Australia’s National AI Centre has listed two in-person Microsoft Copilot training sessions in Queensland aimed at helping participants build practical workplace AI skills.

The first session, Intro to Copilot, is scheduled for 7 July from 10:00 to 11:00 at The Precinct in Fortitude Valley. It is designed as an introductory session covering Microsoft Copilot Chat features, strengths and practical workplace uses for people with personal or business accounts.

The second session, Microsoft Copilot Workshop, will be held later the same day from 17:30 to 19:00 at the same venue. It is intended for people who already have access to Copilot at work but use it infrequently or want to build confidence using the tool.

Both Microsoft Copilot training sessions cover the fundamentals of generative AI, Copilot access, interface features, differences between personal and business versions, chat management, prompting techniques, Pages, Agents and responsible AI use. Participants in the workshop are asked to bring a device for hands-on exercises.

The events are hosted by the Queensland Government, with early-bird tickets priced at AUD 25 and general admission at AUD 40. The National AI Centre notes that registration is handled through third-party websites and that it does not endorse or take responsibility for their content.

Why does it matter?

The training sessions reflect a broader shift from introducing generative AI to helping employees use it effectively in day-to-day work. As tools such as Microsoft Copilot become more widely available, organisations are increasingly investing in practical skills such as prompting, workflow integration and responsible AI use.

The initiative also highlights the growing importance of AI literacy as a workforce capability. Building confidence in using AI tools may help organisations improve productivity while encouraging safer and more informed adoption across different sectors.

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

Belgium warns against unauthorised crypto platforms under MiCA

Belgium’s Financial Services and Markets Authority (FSMA) has added six crypto platforms to its warning list after finding that they are offering services in the country without the authorisation required under the EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) framework.

The regulator identified Aurum Foundation, Bank Bit, Bithf Pro, Dxago, Global Dynamic Trade and ZeriaFunding as crypto-asset service providers operating without the required authorisation. The FSMA urged consumers to check its official register before using crypto platforms or transferring funds.

The warning comes shortly after the EU’s MiCA licensing deadline, as national regulators across the EU begin enforcing the bloc’s new crypto regulatory framework. Authorities are increasing scrutiny of crypto firms as they adapt to the new authorisation requirements.

MiCA is also prompting firms to reassess their regulatory strategies. Crypto exchange Binance recently withdrew its licence application in Greece while pursuing authorisation in another EU jurisdiction, illustrating how companies are adjusting to the new framework.

Why does it matter?

Belgium’s action illustrates that MiCA is entering its enforcement phase, with national regulators beginning to act against crypto firms that fail to obtain the necessary authorisations. The shift from adopting legislation to enforcing it is likely to reshape how crypto businesses operate across the EU.

The new framework also aims to strengthen consumer confidence by establishing common licensing standards throughout the single market. While stricter oversight may increase compliance costs for some firms, it could also encourage greater market stability and make it easier for authorised providers to operate across multiple EU member states.

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

IMF warns policy choices will define tokenised finance future

The International Monetary Fund has warned that policy choices made today will shape whether tokenised finance strengthens or fragments the financial system.

In a new blog post, IMF Financial Counsellor Tobias Adrian said tokenisation should not be viewed only as a technological upgrade for faster settlement, cheaper payments and programmable assets.

When financial assets and liabilities move onto shared digital ledgers, processes that are currently sequential, including execution, clearing and settlement, can happen simultaneously through software.

The IMF said this could reduce costs, improve efficiency and enable new forms of programmable finance. However, it could also shift risks away from traditional financial institutions and towards platforms, service providers and market infrastructures.

Related IMF research highlights several possible settlement assets for tokenised finance, including tokenised bank deposits, stablecoins and tokenised central bank reserves.

Each model raises different policy questions around liquidity, financial stability, private-sector innovation and the role of public money.

The IMF said the long-term success of tokenisation depends on clear policy frameworks, safe settlement assets, robust governance of code, legal certainty and international coordination.

It also stressed that policymakers will need to address cybersecurity, interoperability and oversight of smart contracts as tokenised markets develop.

Why does it matter?

Tokenisation could change how financial assets are issued, transferred and settled, making finance faster and more programmable. Yet the IMF warns that efficiency gains alone do not guarantee stability. If tokenised markets develop across incompatible platforms, weak settlement assets or poorly governed smart contracts, the result could be fragmentation and new systemic risks. The policy challenge is therefore to build rules and infrastructure that support innovation while preserving trust, legal certainty and financial stability.

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

EU urged to cover platform monetisation in Digital Fairness Act

A coalition of civil society organisations, academics, and advocates has published an open letter urging the European Commission to ensure that forthcoming Digital Fairness Act rules on influencer marketing extend beyond third-party advertising payments to include income generated through platform monetisation services.

The signatories welcome the Commission’s proposal to require influencers to disclose payments received for their content but argue that it leaves a significant transparency gap. They note that social media platforms increasingly provide creators with monetisation tools such as subscriptions, donations, affiliate marketing, branded partnerships and platform-funded bonus programmes, many of which would fall outside rules focused solely on third-party advertising payments.

The letter proposes minimum transparency measures including labels identifying content that benefits from platform monetisation, account-level labels showing participation in monetisation programmes, public monetisation libraries to support independent oversight, and disclosures explaining platforms’ monetisation policies, moderation practices and enforcement.

The coalition, whose members include AlgorithmWatch, Bits of Freedom, Corporate Europe Observatory, and the Digital Rights Foundation, together with academic experts including an associate professor from Finland’s Hanken School of Economics, has invited the Commission to discuss ways of incorporating these proposals into the Digital Fairness Act before it is finalised.

Why does it matter?

The debate reflects a broader shift in how online influence is financed. Increasingly, creators earn income not only from advertisers but also through platform-designed monetisation systems that reward engagement, subscriptions and other forms of user activity. Without transparency around these incentives, audiences may struggle to distinguish between organic content and content shaped by commercial rewards built into platform design.

The Digital Fairness Act, therefore, presents an opportunity to broaden consumer protection beyond traditional advertising disclosure. Extending transparency requirements to platform monetisation could improve accountability for creators and platforms alike while giving regulators, researchers and users greater visibility into the financial incentives shaping online content.

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

AI is reshaping work more through job transformation than job loss, WSIS panel hears

AI is changing the world of work in more complex ways than simply replacing workers, according to experts speaking at the WSIS Forum 2026. Panellists from the International Labour Organization (ILO) and the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) argued that while AI will automate some tasks, its broader impact will be felt through changing job quality, workplace surveillance, recruitment practices and skills requirements, making human-centred policies essential to ensure workers benefit from the digital transition.

The discussion highlighted that governments, employers and workers all have a role in shaping the future of work, with speakers calling for stronger labour protections, social dialogue and investment in digital skills to prevent AI from deepening existing inequalities.

AI is changing tasks and working conditions more than eliminating jobs

Sher Verick, Head of the Employment Strategies Unit in the Employment Policy Department of the ILO, challenged the widespread narrative that AI will trigger mass unemployment. Presenting findings from the ILO’s AI exposure index, he said around one in four workers worldwide are exposed to AI, yet only 3.3% of global employment falls into occupations that are highly vulnerable to automation.

‘The focus shouldn’t only be on job losses,’ Verick argued, explaining that AI is transforming how work is organised rather than simply eliminating occupations. Jobs involving a diverse range of tasks are more likely to change than disappear, while new roles are already emerging across AI supply chains, including data annotation and other support functions.

He stressed that the most significant impact may be on job quality rather than job numbers. Automated recruitment systems, algorithmic task allocation and AI-driven performance monitoring are already reshaping working conditions across sectors, while productivity gains could eventually create new employment opportunities through wider economic growth.

Algorithmic management raises new concerns for workers

Uma Rani Amara, Senior Economist at the Research Department of the ILO, argued that the conversation about AI should extend well beyond generative AI tools such as ChatGPT to include the algorithmic management systems increasingly used across workplaces.

Drawing on examples from manufacturing and healthcare, she explained that AI-powered surveillance tools, CCTV systems and digital performance dashboards are allowing employers to monitor workers more closely than ever before. While companies often present these technologies as efficiency tools, she warned that they can increase workplace stress, intensify workloads and reduce workers’ autonomy.

In hospitals, digital workflow management systems may improve patient scheduling and resource allocation, but they also place nurses and doctors under greater pressure by increasing workload intensity and extending on-call responsibilities. Even commonly used tools such as messaging applications can create new privacy risks when sensitive information is shared outside secure systems.

Rani also drew attention to what she described as AI’s ‘invisible workforce’, the millions of people, largely based in the Global South, who label data, moderate content, and perform other essential tasks that allow AI systems to function.

‘We should stop calling it AI and start calling it ‘human-in-the-loop intelligence’,’ she said, arguing that AI’s apparent autonomy obscures the human labour underpinning every stage of its development.

She called for stronger protections for these workers through measures such as fair labour standards, mandatory disclosure of AI supply chains and certification systems showing where training data originates and under what working conditions it was produced.

Governments must shape the future of work

Juan Chacaltana, Senior Employment Policies Specialist at ILO, argued that technological change should not be viewed as an inevitable force to which societies simply adapt.

‘The future of work should be shaped through policy,’ he said, presenting findings from an ILO review of 75 employment policy documents that found governments increasingly integrating digital technologies into employment services, labour market information systems and skills programmes.

However, he cautioned against viewing digital tools as a solution in themselves. While technologies can help modernise public employment services and support labour market formalisation, they cannot replace traditional drivers of economic development such as productivity growth, investment and strong institutions.

Chacaltana also warned that governments should avoid using digital tools primarily for surveillance or enforcement. Instead, introducing digital identity systems, AI-assisted public services and labour market technologies should involve workers, employers and other stakeholders through meaningful social dialogue.

The discussion also highlighted groups facing particular risks during the AI transition. Rani warned that young workers could lose the entry-level jobs that traditionally provide experience and career progression, while women risk a ‘double whammy’ of displacement from automation alongside discrimination embedded in biassed AI recruitment systems. Older workers and people in informal employment could also face new forms of exclusion or reduced autonomy as algorithmic systems increasingly influence workplace decisions.

Skills and cooperation are key to an inclusive AI transition

Praachi Kumar, Capacity Development Officer at ITU, said demand for AI-related training has grown rapidly, with interest in AI courses through ITU Academy tripling over the past five years.

The Academy now serves more than 115,000 ICT professionals, the majority from developing countries, while ITU’s Digital Transformation Centres initiative has reached around 700,000 people in underserved communities through digital skills programmes.

Kumar said lifelong learning must remain human-centred, combining technical knowledge with practical experience and peer learning. She also highlighted new multilingual AI governance courses developed in partnership with UNESCO to help address widening skills gaps.

Throughout the discussion, speakers agreed that preparing workers for AI requires far more than technical training. They called for coordinated action across labour, education and technology ministries, alongside stronger partnerships between governments, employers, trade unions and international organisations.

Closing the session, moderator Maria Prieto Berhouet said the debate had consistently returned to one central principle: AI should serve people, not the other way around. Rather than allowing technological change to dictate the future of work, participants argued that governments and social partners must actively shape AI’s role so it enhances productivity while protecting workers’ rights, dignity and opportunities.

Track all key moments from the WSIS Forum 2026 on our dedicated WSIS page.

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

UN pension fund case study highlights ServiceNow CRM rollout

An AI for Good Global Summit 2026 session will examine how the UN Joint Staff Pension Fund used AI and ServiceNow-based CRM tools to support digital services for more than 250,000 beneficiaries.

The session, titled How AI + ServiceNow powers UNJSPF for 250K+ beneficiaries, is scheduled for 7 July on the Solutions Stage.

According to the session description, the case study will focus on how AI and ServiceNow CRM were combined through NPSM, described as an AI-native platform built on ServiceNow.

Organisers say the implementation supported unified workflows, intelligent automation, improved visibility and a better user experience.

The session will also examine how the platform was designed to meet the security, scale and operational requirements of a UN system serving diverse stakeholders worldwide.

The case study is expected to offer lessons for nonprofits and humanitarian organisations seeking to move away from fragmented systems and simplify service delivery.

It will frame AI-enabled CRM and workflow automation as tools for reducing operational complexity and enabling organisations to allocate more resources to mission delivery.

Why does it matter?

The session shows how AI-enabled CRM and workflow tools are moving into large public-interest institutions, not only commercial customer service. For UN agencies, pension funds and nonprofits, the main question is whether such platforms can simplify operations while preserving security, accountability, data protection and reliable service delivery on a global scale. The case is useful, but it should be read as a platform case study rather than independent proof of measured impact.

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

UK firms sign Cyber Resilience Pledge amid rising AI threats

The UK government has launched a voluntary Cyber Resilience Pledge, with more than 60 businesses and strategic government suppliers committing to strengthening their cyber defences.

Founding signatories include companies from retail, finance, media, technology and utilities, including M&S, Nationwide, ITV, Microsoft UK, Cloudflare, Deloitte, Accenture UK, Vodafone Group and VodafoneThree.

The pledge asks organisations to take three practical steps: make cybersecurity a board-level responsibility, register for the National Cyber Security Centre’s Early Warning service and take a risk-based approach to requiring Cyber Essentials certification across supply chains.

The government said the pledge is designed mainly for medium and large organisations, but is open to organisations of all sizes and sectors.

Signatories will be asked to publish a signed pledge letter and provide an annual update on progress.

The launch comes ahead of the government’s National Cyber Action Plan, which is expected to set out further cooperation with industry on cyber resilience in the AI era.

According to the government, cyberattacks cost UK organisations an estimated £14.7 billion a year, while the NCSC handled 204 nationally significant incidents in the year to September, up from 89 the previous year.

Officials also warned that AI is lowering barriers for attackers by helping them find software weaknesses, write exploit code and scale attacks more quickly.

Why does it matter?

The pledge elevates cyber resilience to board-level corporate governance, rather than treating it solely as an IT function. Its supply-chain focus is also important because major cyber incidents often spread through vendors, service providers and connected business partners. By linking the pledge to AI-enabled threats, the UK government is signalling that basic cyber hygiene, governance and supply-chain assurance remain essential even as attacks become faster and more automated.

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