New AI model analyses X-rays to predict ageing and disease risk

AI may offer a new way to assess how quickly the body is aging by analysing chest X-rays, according to research published in The Journals of Gerontology. The CXR-Age AI model detected age-related changes in the heart, lungs, and health more accurately than DNA-based epigenetic clocks.

Researchers compared CXR-Age to two biological age measures, Horvath Age and DNAm PhenoAge, using data from 2,097 adults in the Project Baseline Health Study, a US multi-site initiative exploring health and disease over time.

CXR-Age showed strong links with early signs of heart and lung aging, frailty, and proteins associated with neuroinflammation, while DNA clocks displayed weaker or no correlations, particularly in middle-aged adults.

Findings suggest that AI applied to routine medical imaging could help clinicians identify individuals at risk of age-related diseases before symptoms appear. AI metrics like CXR-Age could enhance traditional assessments and support personalised preventive healthcare.

The study concludes that machine learning and medical imaging have the potential to advance understanding of organ-specific aging, offering a promising tool for monitoring cardiopulmonary health and supporting early interventions.

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UNDP and UNESCO support AI training for judiciary

UNESCO and UNDP have partnered to enhance judicial capacity on the ethical use of AI. A three-day Bangkok training, supported by the Thailand Institute of Justice, brought together 27 judges from 13 Asia-Pacific countries to discuss the impact of AI on justice and safeguards for fairness.

Expert sessions highlighted the global use of AI in court administration, research, and case management, emphasising opportunities and risks. Participants explored ways to use AI ethically while protecting human rights and judicial integrity, warning that unsupervised tools could increase bias and undermine public trust.

Trainers emphasised that AI must be implemented with careful attention to bias, transparency, and structural inequalities.

Judges reflected on the growing complexity of verifying evidence in the age of generative AI and deepfakes, and acknowledged that responsible AI can improve access to justice, support case reviews, and free time for substantive decision-making.

The initiative concluded with a consensus that AI adoption in courts should be guided by governance, transparency, and ongoing dialogue. The UNDP will continue to collaborate in advancing ethical, human rights-focused AI in regional judiciaries.

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UN member states adopt WSIS+20 outcome document

The WSIS+20 review process – dedicated to reviewing progress made in the implementation of outcomes of the World Summit on the Information Society, 20 years after their adoption – finalised in New York, with the adoption of an outcome document at the end of a dedicated high-level meeting of the General Assembly. Following several months of consultations and negotiations, the document takes stock of progress made towards the WSIS vision of a people-centred, inclusive, and development-oriented information society, while identifying areas where further efforts and strengthened cooperation remain necessary.

The outcome document contains several provisions on the WSIS architecture, reaffirming existing mechanisms and introducing some adjustments aimed at strengthening implementation, coherence, and follow-up. One significant decision made as part of the WSIS+20 process concerns the Internet Governance Forum (IGF). Established in 2005 with a time-bound mandate that was renewed in 2010 and 2015, the IGF is now made a permanent forum of the United Nations. This decision reflects broad support among member states and was widely welcomed by non-governmental stakeholders as well.

In addition to making the IGF permanent, the outcome document introduces several measures intended to enhance its functioning and impact. The IGF is called upon to improve its work modalities and to broaden participation, particularly by governments and stakeholders from developing countries and underrepresented communities. It is invited to reinforce intersessional work, strengthen support for national and regional IGF initiatives, and apply innovative, inclusive, transparent, and agile collaboration methods.

The document also calls for the strengthening of the IGF Secretariat and requests the Secretary-General to submit a proposal to the General Assembly to ensure sustainable funding for the Forum. The IGF is further requested to report annually on progress to the Commission on Science and Technology for Development (CSTD) and to report its outcomes to relevant UN entities and processes, with a call for the UN Group on the Information Society (UNGIS), action line facilitators, the WSIS Forum, and other relevant bodies to take IGF outcomes into account in their work.

One interesting point negotiated among member states concerned the establishment of a governmental segment at the IGF. Some member states viewed this track as an important element towards fostering more dialogue among governments on digital governance issues (for some, it was also a response to the call for enhanced cooperation in the Tunis Agenda).

Others were concerned that such a segment would shift away from the IGF’s multistakeholder nature (despite the fact that the IGF, at the moment, has dedicated tracks for various groups such as parliamentarians). The final text is meant to be a compromise: The Forum is called upon to work on ‘establishing and facilitating a dialogue among Governments with the participation of all stakeholders’. 

Beyond the IGF, member states agreed that the WSIS Forum should continue to be held on an annual basis and invited the UNGIS to enhance its agility, efficiency, and effectiveness, as well as to expand its membership.

Additional provisions aim to strengthen coherence across UN digital processes. Action line facilitators are requested to develop targeted implementation roadmaps linking WSIS action lines with relevant Sustainable Development Goal targets and Global Digital Compact (GDC) commitments. Furthermore, UNGIS is requested to prepare a joint implementation roadmap to strengthen coherence between WSIS and the GDC, to be presented to CSTD in 2026. The Secretary-General is requested to submit a biennial report on WSIS implementation progress, to be considered by CSTD and ECOSOC, and the General Assembly is requested to convene a further high-level review of WSIS outcomes in 2035.

Throughout the WSIS+20 process, many discussions focused on the interplay between WSIS and GDC processes and the need to avoid duplication and enhance synergies. This is recognised in the outcome document, and several provisions – in particular those related to the implementation roadmaps, coupled with other elements describing roles for the UN Secretary-General, CSTD, the Economic and Social Council, and the General Assembly – offer important pathways in this regard. Moving forward, the key will be in how these provisions are implemented.

Substantively, the outcome document places the closure of digital divides at the core of the WSIS+20 agenda. It addresses multiple and intersecting dimensions of digital exclusion, including accessibility and equal access, inclusion of people in vulnerable situations and those in underserved, rural, and remote areas, affordability and quality of connectivity, multilingualism, cultural diversity, and the commitment to connect all schools to the Internet. The document emphasises that digital inclusion requires more than connectivity alone and must be supported by skills development, enabling environments, and respect for human rights.

The document also underscores the importance of fostering an open, fair, and non-discriminatory environment for digital development, including in the context of the digital economy. It highlights the need for predictable and transparent policy, legal, and regulatory frameworks, calls for technical assistance and technology transfer to developing countries on mutually agreed terms, and reiterates the call for states to refrain from unilateral economic measures not in line with international law. Environmental sustainability is also covered, with commitments to leverage digital technologies for sustainability while addressing energy use, critical mineral resources, e-waste management, and the development of international standards for sustainable digital products.

Human rights and ethical considerations are reaffirmed as foundational to the information society. The outcome document reiterates that the same rights apply online and offline, commits to safeguards to prevent and address adverse human rights impacts of digital technologies, and calls on the private sector to respect human rights throughout the technology lifecycle. It addresses concerns related to violence, hate speech, discrimination, misinformation and disinformation, cyberbullying, and child sexual exploitation and abuse, while emphasising information integrity, media freedom, privacy, freedom of expression, and the need to refrain from internet shutdowns and unlawful surveillance practices.

Capacity development and financing are treated as enablers of implementation. The document highlights the need to strengthen digital skills, policy and technical expertise, and institutional capacity, including in relation to emerging technologies such as AI. It invites the International Telecommunication Union – as Secretariat of UNGIS, and working with WSIS Action Line facilitators and other group members – to establish an internal task force to assess gaps and challenges in financial mechanisms for digital development and to report recommendations to CSTD in 2027.

It also calls on the Inter-Agency Working Group on Artificial Intelligence to map existing UN capacity-building initiatives, identify gaps, and address them, including through the establishment of an AI capacity-building fellowship for government officials and research programmes. These elements were subject to substantive discussions during the negotiations, with some members supporting them as important for building more capacities in AI, and others expressing concerns over potential duplication with existing work.

The outcome document reinforces the importance of monitoring and measurement, requesting a systematic review of existing ICT indicators and methodologies; the Partnership on Measuring ICT for Development is requested to conduct this review, in cooperation with action line facilitators and with the support of the Statistical Commission, and to report to CSTD in 2027. Finally, the document reaffirms the role of CSTD, ECOSOC, and the General Assembly in overall WSIS follow-up and review. 


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UN reviews global digital progress at WSIS+20

The UN General Assembly’s 66th plenary meeting marked the twentieth anniversary review of the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS), taking stock of global progress on digital transformation and the challenges that remain. Delegations highlighted how digital technologies have become central to development, governance, and economic growth, while warning that deep inequalities continue to limit who can benefit from them.

Speakers repeatedly pointed to stark connectivity gaps between and within countries. While internet access is nearly universal in high-income states, less than a quarter of people in low-income countries are connected, with persistent rural-urban and gender divides.

Representatives from the least developed countries and small island states emphasised that limited digital access has a direct impact on education, healthcare, economic opportunities, and effective public administration.

Internet governance was another focal point, with broad support for formally establishing the Internet Governance Forum as a permanent UN body. Many countries defended the multistakeholder model as essential to keeping the internet open and resilient, although some raised concerns about the need for stronger participation by developing countries and questioned whether the current framework provides states with sufficient influence.

AI emerged as a defining issue for the next phase of digital cooperation. While several countries outlined national and regional AI strategies, others warned that the concentration of computing power and infrastructure in a few countries could create new global divides. Calls grew for ethical, responsible, and inclusive AI governance, alongside stronger international dialogue and cooperation.

Human rights in the digital space featured prominently throughout the debate. Delegations reaffirmed that the rights people enjoy offline must be protected online, raising concerns about internet shutdowns, surveillance, online violence, and threats to journalists and civil society.

Cybersecurity was also framed as a development and trust issue, with warnings about cybercrime, attacks on critical infrastructure, and risks to children and young people online.

Looking ahead, speakers emphasised the need to align WSIS outcomes with the sustainable development goals and the Global Digital Compact while addressing financing, capacity development, and environmental sustainability. The review highlighted both the progress made in global digital development and to significant challenges that remain, as governments grapple with the rapid pace of technological change and the increasing political, social, and economic stakes of the digital future.

Diplo and the Geneva Internet Platform will provide just-in-time reporting from the high-level meeting. Bookmark this page.

For more details about WSIS and the 20-year review, consult our WSIS+20 process dedicated page.

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WSIS+20 highlights deep gaps in global digital access

Twenty years after the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) laid the foundations for global digital cooperation, UN member states gathered in New York to assess what has been achieved and what still lies out of reach. The WSIS+20 High-Level Meeting of the UN General Assembly highlighted how deeply digital technologies now shape everyday life, while also exposing the uneven distribution of their benefits across societies and regions.

Despite major progress in connectivity, speakers warned that the world faces not a digital ‘gap’ but a digital ‘canyon’. While most people live within reach of mobile broadband, more than two billion remain offline, predominantly in developing countries.

Delegations stressed that meaningful digital inclusion depends not only on networks, but also on affordability, skills, institutions, and the ability to participate fully in the digital economy and public life.

Gender inequality emerged as one of the most urgent concerns. Women remain significantly less likely to be online than men, and digital harms disproportionately affect them, from exclusion from economic opportunities to widespread gender-based abuse enabled by new technologies.

Participants underlined that closing the gender digital divide is not only a matter of rights and justice, but also a major economic opportunity with global benefits.

AI featured prominently, with broad agreement that AI must be governed in a human-centred and rights-based way. Several speakers warned of a growing ‘AI divide’, driven by unequal access to computing power, data, and linguistic representation. Concerns were raised that AI systems risk reinforcing existing inequalities unless global cooperation ensures that emerging technologies serve public interests rather than deepen exclusion.

Debates over internet governance revealed both strong consensus and sharp geopolitical tensions. Most countries reaffirmed support for the multistakeholder model and called for strengthening the Internet Governance Forum, including making it a permanent UN platform with sustainable funding.

At the same time, disagreements surfaced over state control, sovereignty, and the future institutional architecture of global digital governance.

Looking ahead, the meeting underscored that digital transformation is no longer just a technical issue but a deeply political one, tied to human rights, development, security, and power. While the original WSIS principles remain widely supported, participants agreed that renewed ambition, financing, and cooperation are essential to ensure that digital technologies, including AI, deliver tangible benefits for all, rather than widening the divides they were meant to close.

Diplo and the Geneva Internet Platform will provide just-in-time reporting from the high-level meeting. Bookmark this page.

For more details about WSIS and the 20-year review, consult our WSIS+20 process dedicated page.

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UK launches taskforce to boost women in tech

The UK government has formed a Women in Tech taskforce to help more women enter, remain and lead across the technology sector. Technology secretary Liz Kendall will guide the group alongside industry figures determined to narrow long-standing representation gaps highlighted by recent BCS data.

Members include Anne-Marie Imafidon, Allison Kirkby and Francesca Carlesi, who will advise ministers on boosting diversity and supporting economic growth. Leaders stress that better representation enables more inclusive decision-making and encourages technology built with wider perspectives in mind.

The taskforce plans to address barriers affecting women’s progression, ranging from career access to investment opportunities. Organisations such as techUK and the Royal Academy of Engineering argue that gender imbalance limits innovation, particularly as the UK pursues ambitious AI goals.

UK officials expect working groups to develop proposals over the coming months, focusing on practical steps that broaden the talent pool. Advocates say the initiative arrives at a crucial moment as emerging technologies reshape employment and demand more inclusive leadership.

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Private surveillance raises concerns in New Orleans

New Orleans has become the first US city to use real time facial recognition through a privately operated system. The technology flags wanted individuals as they pass cameras, with alerts sent directly to police despite ongoing disputes between city officials.

A local non profit runs the network independently and sets its own guard rails for police cooperation. Advocates claim the arrangement limits bureaucracy, while critics argue it bypasses vital public oversight and privacy protections.

Debate over facial recognition has intensified nationwide as communities question accuracy, fairness and civil liberties. New Orleans now represents a major test case for how such tools may develop without clear government regulation.

Officials remain divided over long term consequences while campaigners warn of creeping surveillance risks. Residents are likely to face years of uncertainty as policies evolve and private systems grow more influential.

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UN General Assembly to hold WSIS+20 high-level meeting

The UN will hold a high-level meeting of the General Assembly on 16–17 December 2025 to conclude the WSIS+20 review, marking 20 years since the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) outlined a global vision for an inclusive and people-centred information society. The review assesses the progress made by countries and stakeholders in implementing the WSIS outcomes agreed upon in Geneva in 2003 and in Tunis in 2005.

The WSIS+20 process examines the progress made over the past two decades while also identifying remaining challenges, including persistent digital divides, gaps in access to information and communication technologies (ICTs), and the need to harness digital tools more effectively for sustainable development. The high-level meeting will feature four plenary sessions with statements from UN member states, observers, and other stakeholders, in line with a recent General Assembly resolution.

A key outcome of the meeting will be the adoption of a final WSIS+20 outcome document, which will reflect on achievements so far and outline priorities for future action. Alongside the main sessions, a series of in-person, virtual, and off-site side events starting on 15 December 2025 will showcase innovations, share experiences, highlight emerging digital issues, and announce voluntary commitments aimed at strengthening an inclusive and development-oriented information society.

Diplo and the Geneva Internet Platform will provide just-in-time reporting from the high-level meeting. Bookmark this page; more details will be available soon.

For more details about WSIS and the 20-year review, consult our WSIS+20 process dedicated page.

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No sensitive data compromised in SoundCloud incident

SoundCloud has confirmed a recent security incident that temporarily affected platform availability and involved the limited exposure of user data. The company detected unauthorised activity on an ancillary service dashboard and acted immediately to contain the situation.

Third-party cybersecurity experts were engaged to investigate and support the response. The incident resulted in two brief denial-of-service attacks, temporarily disrupting web access.

Approximately 20% of users were affected; however, no sensitive data, such as passwords or financial details, were compromised. Only email addresses and publicly visible profile information were involved.

In response, SoundCloud has strengthened its systems, enhancing monitoring, reviewing identity and access controls, and auditing related systems. Some configuration updates have led to temporary VPN connectivity issues, which the company is working to resolve.

SoundCloud emphasises that user privacy remains a top priority and encourages vigilance against phishing. The platform will continue to provide updates and take steps to minimise the risk of future incidents.

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Streaming platforms face pressure over AI-generated music

Musicians are raising the alarm over AI-generated tracks appearing on their profiles without consent, presenting fraudulent work as their own. British folk artist Emily Portman discovered an AI-generated album, Orca, on Spotify and Apple Music, which copied her folk style and lyrics.

Fans initially congratulated her on a release she had not made since 2022.

Australian musician Paul Bender reported a similar experience, with four ‘bizarrely bad’ AI tracks appearing under his band, The Sweet Enoughs. Both artists said that weak distributor security allows scammers to easily upload content, calling it ‘the easiest scam in the world.’

A petition launched by Bender garnered tens of thousands of signatures, urging platforms to strengthen their protections.

AI-generated music has become increasingly sophisticated, making it nearly impossible for listeners to distinguish from genuine tracks. While revenues from such fraudulent streams are low individually, bots and repeated listening can significantly increase payouts.

Industry representatives note that the primary motive is to collect royalties from unsuspecting users.

Despite the threat of impersonation, Portman is continuing her creative work, emphasising human collaboration and authentic artistry. Spotify and Apple Music have pledged to collaborate with distributors to enhance the detection and prevention of AI-generated fraud.

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