UK expert panel to shape online safety policy

The UK Department for Science, Innovation and Technology has published the terms of reference for the Growing Up in the Online World expert panel, an independent group that will advise the government on children’s digital experiences.

The panel will provide impartial, evidence-based advice to support government policy development on children’s online well-being. Its remit includes digital technology, social media, gaming, AI chatbots, and proposals under the Growing up in the online world consultation.

DSIT said the panel will help identify evidence gaps and priority research needs for 2026 to 2027 and beyond. It is also intended to provide independent assurance that policy options are considered in the context of the evolving evidence base.

The panel’s responsibilities include reviewing emerging data on children’s online experiences, online safety, and design interventions. It will also scrutinise DSIT’s presentation of consultation evidence, identify risks and dependencies, and provide recommendations to inform advice to ministers.

Members will serve in a personal capacity and must declare conflicts of interest. DSIT said it will publish the panel’s membership once it has been agreed, along with declarations of conflicts of interest.

The panel will bring together expertise in child development, psychology, education, digital harms, online safety, behavioural science, platform design, data infrastructure, algorithmic systems, ethics, safeguarding, equality, human rights, and lived experience.

DSIT expects the panel to meet monthly via Microsoft Teams for the initial 4-month period, with additional meetings around key milestones. The panel will not set government policy, publish independent reports, represent employers or sectors, or engage with media on behalf of DSIT.

Why does it matter?

The panel shows how the UK is trying to ground children’s online safety and well-being policy in a broader evidence base covering platform design, AI chatbots, gaming, behavioural science, safeguarding, and lived experience. Its creation also points to a more formal advisory process around future policy choices, even though the panel itself will not set policy.

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YouthDig participants urge stronger youth role in shaping digital policy at EuroDIG 2026

Youth participants at EuroDIG 2026 called for stronger protections around AI, surveillance, children’s rights, accessibility, labour conditions, and digital inclusion, while urging policymakers to involve young people more directly in shaping internet governance and digital policy.

The session focused on presenting the outcomes of YouthDig 2025, EuroDIG’s youth dialogue on internet governance, which brings together young participants from across Europe and neighbouring regions to discuss digital policy issues and draft collective policy messages.

Florence Ranson opened the session by explaining that the discussion aimed to provide a more detailed presentation of the youth messages developed during the YouthDig programme. Frances Douglas-Thompson, member of the EuroDIG Programme Committee, described YouthDig as a preparatory process that combines policy discussions, capacity-building activities, and long-term community-building among young people interested in internet governance.

Organisers said YouthDig 2025 received around 400 applications and brought together 30 participants onsite in Brussels from diverse academic, professional, and geographic backgrounds. Participants included students, academics, civil servants, local politicians, and representatives from public institutions.

The programme included preparatory webinars and in-person discussions focused on AI, online child safety, AI in public services, healthcare, environmental impacts of digital technologies, disinformation, state surveillance, internet shutdowns, and democratic resilience.

Somaya Louhmadi, YouthDIG organiser/presenter, explained that one part of the programme involved crisis simulations addressing deepfakes and AI-driven election manipulation scenarios, while other sessions focused on privacy, cookies, and digital rights from a human rights perspective.

YouthDIG representatives Cecile Vicquery and Liana Vasil then presented the collective policy messages drafted during the event. Participants highlighted concerns surrounding data ownership, profiling, surveillance, algorithmic bias, workplace protections, and AI’s impact on vulnerable groups.

The youth messages also called for stronger digital literacy, protections for children’s data, mental health support related to social media use, accessibility for persons with disabilities and older users, improved rural connectivity, and greater transparency around AI-generated content.

Participants further raised concerns about the environmental and labour impacts associated with digital infrastructure and AI supply chains, including the working conditions of content moderators and resource extraction workers.

On disinformation and AI-generated content, the youth group proposed stronger media literacy initiatives, clearer labelling of AI-generated images and videos, and safeguards against harmful uses of AI systems.

Responding to the youth presentations, Fabrizia Benini of the European Commission said young people’s perspectives should play a more direct role in policymaking and linked the discussion to broader EU youth dialogue initiatives and debates on human-centric digital transformation.

Sophie Kwasny of the Council of Europe highlighted the participants’ focus on power structures, vulnerability, surveillance, and social consequences of digital governance. She also encouraged young people to make use of existing legal and institutional frameworks related to privacy, data protection, and human rights.

Both speakers stressed that youth participation should go beyond symbolic representation and involve meaningful co-design of digital policy processes.

The discussion also reflected on the challenges of reaching consensus within multistakeholder discussions. Participants explained that differences in educational, cultural, and stakeholder backgrounds sometimes made agreement on specific policy solutions difficult, particularly around normative questions linked to regulation and digital rights.

The session concluded with calls for young people to remain active in digital policy debates, build stronger networks, and continue engaging with existing institutional and governance processes.

EuroDIG 2026 takes place on 26 and 27 May at the Charlemagne Building of the European Commission in Brussels under the theme ‘European Voices for the Future of the Internet – Celebrating 20 Years of .eu and the Beginning of a New Internet Governance Era’.

Digital Watch Observatory is following EuroDIG 2026 through a dedicated event page, featuring session information and reporting from Brussels.

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CBDC: The antithesis of cryptocurrency

Central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) have rapidly become one of the most debated topics in global finance. The growing adoption of cryptocurrency, the expansion of stablecoins, and the broader digitalisation of payment systems have prompted governments and central banks to reconsider how state-issued money should function in the digital era. Supporters present CBDCs as a modern financial innovation while critics argue that they could increase state control over financial activity. 

Unlike traditional debates surrounding cryptocurrencies, discussions about CBDCs extend beyond the technology alone. Questions surrounding privacy, financial sovereignty, surveillance, monetary policy, and the future role of governments in digital finance now sit at the centre of the global CBDC debate. As more jurisdictions move from research to pilot programmes and implementation, CBDCs are increasingly viewed as a response to the rise of crypto assets and a broader transformation of modern financial infrastructure.

CBDCs represent a state-driven counterpoint to cryptocurrency.
image via Magnific

What are CBDCs?

A central bank digital currency is a digital form of fiat currency issued and controlled by a central bank. Unlike decentralised cryptocurrencies, CBDCs remain fully tied to state monetary systems and national currencies. Their value is supported by governments in much the same way as traditional currency.

Anti-crypto by design, CBDCs differ significantly from cryptocurrencies despite often using similar technological concepts. Decentralised digital assets such as Bitcoin operate without a central authority and rely on distributed blockchain networks, whereas CBDCs are centrally managed and regulated. In practice, CBDCs represent a digital state currency, not an alternative financial system.

Most CBDC models fall into two categories: retail CBDCs and wholesale CBDCs. Retail CBDCs are designed for public use in everyday transactions, while wholesale CBDCs focus on interbank settlements and institutional payments. 

Central banks have accelerated CBDC research partly because digital payments increasingly dominate global commerce. The rapid growth of crypto markets and private stablecoins has also intensified discussions about whether states risk losing influence over monetary systems if digital finance evolves outside government control.

CBDCs represent a state-driven counterpoint to cryptocurrency.
image via Magnific

Why governments support CBDCs

Governments and central banks generally present CBDCs as a financial modernisation tool. One of the most frequently cited advantages involves payment efficiency. CBDCs could potentially enable faster domestic transactions, reduce settlement delays, and lower the cost of cross-border payments. In economies where digital payments already dominate consumer behaviour, central banks increasingly argue that public money must evolve alongside technological change.

Another major factor behind CBDC development is monetary sovereignty. The rise of cryptocurrencies and privately issued stablecoins has raised concerns among policymakers that private digital assets could weaken the state’s influence over financial systems. From this perspective, CBDCs are viewed as a way to maintain central bank authority in an increasingly digital economy.

Supporters also argue that CBDCs could improve financial inclusion. In regions where large parts of the population remain outside of traditional banking systems, digital state-backed wallets could provide broader access to financial services without requiring conventional bank accounts. 

Some policymakers also view CBDCs as a strategic response to growing geopolitical competition in financial technology. Digital currencies could eventually reshape international payment networks and reduce dependence on existing cross-border settlement systems. As a result, CBDCs are increasingly becoming part of broader discussions surrounding economic competitiveness and technological sovereignty.

CBDCs represent a state-driven counterpoint to cryptocurrency.
image via Magnific

Why the crypto community opposes CBDCs

Opposition to CBDCs within the cryptocurrency community largely centres on concerns surrounding centralisation and state control. Many crypto advocates argue that CBDCs contradict the original philosophy behind decentralised cryptocurrencies, which were designed to operate independently of governments and central financial institutions. Moreover, CBDCs are seen as an attempt to imitate cryptocurrencies.

Privacy concerns remain one of the most significant criticisms. Critics fear that CBDCs could expand government visibility into personal financial activity, particularly if digital payment systems become directly connected to state-controlled infrastructure. Unlike cash transactions, which provide a degree of anonymity, CBDC transactions could potentially allow authorities to monitor spending patterns in real time.

Concerns about programmable money have also intensified debate. Some critics argue that CBDCs could theoretically enable restrictions on how, where, or when money is spent. Although many governments insist that such scenarios are speculative, the possibility of programmable financial controls has become a major talking point in the crypto industry.

Another argument frequently raised by crypto supporters involves financial autonomy. Decentralised cryptocurrencies allow users to self-custody assets without relying on banks or governments. CBDCs, by contrast, remain fully integrated into state-controlled financial systems. For many in the crypto sector, this distinction represents a fundamental ideological divide rather than merely a technological difference.

Critics also argue that CBDCs could increase pressure on decentralised cryptocurrencies through stricter regulatory frameworks. Some fear that governments could eventually favour state-backed digital currencies while imposing stricter compliance requirements on private crypto platforms and decentralised finance ecosystems. 

CBDCs represent a state-driven counterpoint to cryptocurrency.
image via Magnific

Global CBDC projects and implementation challenges

Several jurisdictions have already launched or tested CBDC initiatives, producing mixed results across different economic and political environments.

China remains one of the most advanced examples through its digital yuan project, also known as e-CNY. Chinese authorities have promoted CBDC for years as part of a broader effort to modernise payments and strengthen the country’s digital financial infrastructure. However, public adoption has reportedly remained relatively weak despite extensive state support and pilot programmes in major cities. Surveys have indicated that a large majority of respondents neither encountered nor used the digital currency, highlighting ongoing scepticism among consumers.

India has adopted a noticeably more cautious approach towards CBDC implementation through its e-rupee project. Since its launch in late 2022, adoption has remained limited despite various incentives designed to encourage usage. Indian authorities have repeatedly stressed that while CBDCs could improve trade settlements, remittances, and cross-border transactions, the long-term consequences for the banking system remain uncertain. Officials from the Reserve Bank of India have warned that CBDCs could potentially destabilise traditional financial institutions during periods of economic stress. 

Russia has also accelerated the development of the digital rouble as part of its broader financial modernisation strategy. The digital rouble is expected to enter a phased public rollout in 2026, with pilot programmes already including government transfers, commercial payments, transport services, and real estate transactions. Russian authorities have recently announced the country’s first digital ruble salary payment, marking an important symbolic milestone for the project. Authorities have stated that future CBDC salary payments would remain optional for recipients. The Bank of Russia has described the project as one of the world’s most advanced CBDC initiatives and has highlighted smart contracts, budgetary payments, and cross-border settlements as key areas for future application.

In contrast, the United States has become one of the most politically divided jurisdictions regarding CBDCs. Debate surrounding a potential digital dollar has increasingly focused on privacy, civil liberties, and financial surveillance concerns. Several Republican lawmakers have pushed for permanent restrictions that would prevent the Federal Reserve from issuing or even testing a US CBDC. Compared to jurisdictions actively implementing CBDCs, the United States appears to be increasingly focused on limiting government involvement in digital currency systems rather than expanding it.

Meanwhile, the European Central Bank continues to develop the digital euro project. European policymakers have framed the project as part of a broader effort to preserve monetary sovereignty and reduce dependence on non-European payment providers in an increasingly digital economy. According to the ECB, the system is intended to combine the convenience of digital payments with certain characteristics traditionally associated with cash. However, privacy has become one of the most sensitive aspects of the European debate. 

Collectively, these international examples demonstrate that CBDC implementation is not solely a technological challenge. Public trust, political culture, regulatory design, and perceptions of privacy and state control may ultimately prove to be as important as the underlying digital infrastructure itself.

CBDCs represent a state-driven counterpoint to cryptocurrency.
image via Magnific

CBDCs and cryptocurrencies: competition or coexistence?

Despite the growing tension between the two models, CBDCs and cryptocurrencies may not necessarily become direct replacements for one another. Analysts argue that the two systems could coexist while serving different purposes within the broader digital economy.

CBDCs are primarily designed to preserve and modernise existing monetary systems, whereas cryptocurrencies often aim to provide alternatives outside of traditional financial structures. From that perspective, CBDCs may function as a regulated digital payment infrastructure while decentralised cryptocurrencies continue to attract users seeking autonomy, borderless transactions, or alternative stores of value.

Some observers also believe that CBDC development could indirectly accelerate digital asset adoption by familiarising the public with blockchain-related technologies, tokenised payments, and digital wallets. Greater public exposure to digital currencies may ultimately increase broader participation in digital finance in general.

At the same time, tensions between the two ecosystems are unlikely to disappear entirely. The debate over CBDCs increasingly reflects a broader conflict between institutional control and decentralised financial models. Questions surrounding privacy, regulation, and ownership of financial data are likely to remain central as digital currency systems continue to evolve.

 CBDCs represent a state-driven counterpoint to cryptocurrency.
image via Magnific

Rethinking money, trust, and sovereignty

Ultimately, the debate over CBDCs is not merely about payments or financial technology, but about the future relationship between citizens, money, and the state itself. Throughout modern history, money has represented more than just economic value alone- it has reflected trust, sovereignty, political power, and social stability. As finance becomes increasingly digital, governments and societies are now forced to reconsider the role that public money should play in an environment shaped by decentralised technologies, borderless transactions, and rapidly evolving digital economies.

CBDCs may therefore emerge as one of the defining financial experiments of the twenty-first century. Their long-term significance will likely depend not only on technological efficiency but also on whether central banks can preserve public confidence while adapting to a digital era that increasingly values autonomy, privacy, and financial flexibility. Excessive state control could intensify public resistance, while insufficient innovation may risk weakening the relevance of sovereign currencies in a global financial system increasingly influenced by private digital assets and decentralised networks.

Rather than representing a simple conflict between governments and cryptocurrency communities, the rise of CBDCs may ultimately signal the beginning of a broader transformation in how value, trust, and economic participation are understood in the digital age. The countries that succeed may not necessarily be those with the most advanced technology, but those capable of balancing innovation with civil liberties, monetary stability with openness, and financial modernisation with public trust.

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EU adopts unified cyber incident reporting templates under NIS2

The NIS Cooperation Group has adopted common templates for cybersecurity incident reporting across the EU, marking a step towards more harmonised compliance requirements for companies subject to the NIS2 Directive.

The templates were adopted during the group’s 39th plenary meeting in Cyprus and are intended to provide a uniform format for reporting cyber incidents across member states. The NIS Cooperation Group brings together the EU member states, the European Commission, and the EU Agency for Cybersecurity (ENISA) as part of wider EU cybersecurity coordination efforts.

According to the Commission, the standardised templates are designed to reduce administrative burdens and simplify compliance for companies required to report cybersecurity incidents under NIS2. The move also aligns with broader EU efforts to create a single-entry point for incident reporting under the proposed Digital Omnibus initiative.

The Commission now plans to adopt the templates through an implementing act, which would make them mandatory for all member states. The EU officials say harmonised reporting fields should reduce fragmentation, simplify reporting obligations, and help strengthen cybersecurity resilience across the bloc.

Why does it matter?

Cybersecurity reporting requirements across Europe have often created complexity for companies operating in multiple jurisdictions. Common templates could reduce duplication, make reporting procedures more predictable, and improve coordination between national authorities. The move also fits into the EU’s broader push to simplify digital compliance while strengthening cyber resilience under NIS2.

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WhatsApp introduces private AI chat mode for Meta AI conversations

WhatsApp has introduced a new private mode for conversations with Meta AI that limits storage and retention of chat data. According to Meta, conversations are designed to disappear after chats end and are not stored on company servers.

WhatsApp head Will Cathcart said the feature responds to user demand for more private AI interactions involving sensitive topics. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg described the feature as an AI product designed without persistent server-side conversation logs.

Professor Alan Woodward of the University of Surrey reportedly raised concerns about how disappearing conversations could affect accountability and investigations into harmful AI interactions. According to reports, critics argued that limited data retention could complicate review processes in cases involving harm or misuse.

Meta stated that the feature will initially support text-based interactions and include safeguards intended to block harmful or illegal requests. The announcement comes amid Meta’s broader expansion of AI-related products and infrastructure investments.

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Argentina launches AI ‘Digital Twin’ system for social policy simulations

Argentina’s Ministry of Human Capital has launched the ‘Digital Twin’ initiative, an AI-based system intended to simulate potential impacts of social policies before implementation. According to the government, the project is part of broader efforts to use data analysis and predictive tools in public policy planning.

The system is designed to model scenarios related to areas including poverty, subsidies, and human capital development using large-scale datasets. Officials said the initiative could support more anticipatory and data-informed policymaking processes.

The announcement by President Javier Milei was followed by public criticism related to promotional materials associated with the initiative. Opposition representatives have requested additional information concerning the project’s legal basis, data usage, and privacy safeguards.

Privacy specialists and analysts also raised concerns about governance frameworks, data aggregation, and potential profiling risks. The government has not yet publicly detailed oversight mechanisms or specific data protection standards linked to the initiative.

Why does it matter?

Argentina’s Digital Twin project reflects a broader global shift towards using AI to simulate and predict social and economic outcomes, potentially reshaping how governments design and test public policy. If effective, such systems could improve efficiency by allowing policymakers to model interventions before implementation, reducing costly or ineffective decisions.

At the same time, the initiative raises significant governance and civil liberties concerns, particularly around large-scale data aggregation and the potential for algorithmic profiling of citizens.

Without clear transparency, oversight, and privacy safeguards, predictive governance tools risk shifting from policy optimisation instruments into systems that enable expanded state surveillance and reduced accountability.

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NSW privacy survey highlights concern over AI and data breaches

Australia’s NSW Privacy Commissioner has published the latest biennial survey on community attitudes towards privacy, highlighting strong public concern over data breaches and the use of AI and automated decision-making by government agencies.

The Information and Privacy Commission’s 2026 Community Attitudes Survey provides an indicative picture of public views in New South Wales on privacy rights, data breaches, access to personal information, and government use of emerging technologies. For the first time, the survey also includes findings on AI and automated decision-making.

The survey found that 70% of respondents were concerned about the NSW government’s use of AI and automated decision-making technologies in public decisions. It also found that 99% of respondents considered the NSW Government’s protection of personal information important, the highest result recorded in the survey. Just under 75% were aware that they could access and amend their personal information, apply for a review, or make a complaint with a NSW Government agency.

Concern about data breaches was also high, with 84% to 91% of respondents worried about deliberate hacking, inappropriate sharing, accidental release, and unauthorised access to personal information. Among respondents affected by a breach, 53% had contact information compromised, while 44% had identification information compromised.

Privacy Commissioner Sonia Minutillo said the findings showed that the public places a high value on privacy and is concerned about the risks posed by data breaches and new technologies. She said NSW public sector agencies could strengthen trust by implementing robust governance frameworks for the use of personal information and maintaining strong privacy practices.

The IPC said it will use the results to identify ways to support agencies and the community, and to inform its forward work under the Privacy Proactive Regulatory Initiatives Program.

Why does it matter?

The findings point to a growing trust challenge for public-sector AI deployment. As governments expand the use of AI and automated decision-making, public confidence will depend not only on technical safeguards but also on privacy governance, transparency, and clear avenues for people to access, amend, or challenge the use of their personal information.

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European Commission marks 10 years of GDPR

The European Commission has marked ten years since the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) entered into force across the European Union.

The GDPR entered into force on 24 May 2016 and established a common data protection framework across EU member states, and introduced rules governing the collection and processing of personal data. According to the European Commission, the regulation strengthened individuals’ rights regarding how personal data is collected, processed, corrected, deleted, and shared.

The framework applies to organisations ranging from small businesses to multinational technology companies. Authorities across the EU have also issued significant penalties in cases involving non-compliance with the regulation.

The GDPR has influenced privacy and data protection discussions internationally and contributed to wider adoption of similar regulatory approaches.

The Commission linked the GDPR to broader EU digital regulation efforts, including the Digital Services Act, the Digital Markets Act, and the AI Act. According to the Commission, these measures address issues including platform accountability, competition, and AI governance.

The Commission also referenced online child protection initiatives, including work on age verification and cyberbullying prevention. It said the EU’s approach reflects the principle that the online world should serve people.

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EU advances DSA researcher access with platform roundtable

The European Commission and a group of Digital Services Coordinators have held a roundtable with Very Large Online Platforms and Very Large Online Search Engines to support the first data access requests by vetted researchers under the Digital Services Act.

The meeting focused on the new mechanism for submitting vetted researcher status applications. The DSA and its delegated act give researchers a route to request platform data needed to study systemic risks and societal impacts, while adding safeguards to prevent misuse of accessed data.

Digital Services Coordinators told participants that they had received 49 applications for assessment as of 19 May. The applications mainly request data from social media platforms and focus on risks such as illegal content, advertising transparency and AI features.

The roundtable forms part of the EU’s wider supervision of designated platforms under the DSA. The regime applies to major online services that meet the threshold for Very Large Online Platforms or Very Large Online Search Engines, including XNXX, which was designated as a Very Large Online Platform in 2024 and is therefore subject to stricter transparency, risk assessment and researcher access duties.

The Commission said Digital Services Coordinators are assessing the applications and preparing guidance to help researchers navigate the process. VLOPs and VLOSEs also shared updates on their work to manage data access requests and make data catalogues available.

Although Digital Services Coordinators assess individual applications, the Commission remains responsible for enforcing VLOP and VLOSE compliance with vetted researcher data access obligations. It said it would closely monitor whether platforms provide researchers with access to data as required under the DSA.

The Commission noted that it has already taken action on research-related transparency obligations under the DSA, including proceedings, commitments from AliExpress and the first non-compliance decision and fine issued to X.

Why does it matter?

The roundtable marks an important step toward operationalising DSA researchers’ access. Independent researchers need platform data to study systemic risks such as illegal content, advertising transparency, AI-driven features and risks linked to large online platforms, including adult services such as XNXX. The process will test whether the DSA can turn platform transparency from a legal obligation into usable evidence for public-interest research, while balancing access with privacy, security and safeguards against misuse.

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Grokipedia articles show selective political divergence from Wikipedia, research finds

A new study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences examined structural and political differences between Wikipedia and Grokipedia, the AI-generated encyclopedia developed by xAI.

Researchers analysed 17,790 matched article pairs drawn from the 20,000 most-edited English-language Wikipedia entries. They found that Grokipedia articles are typically longer, more syntactically complex, and contain fewer references and hyperlinks per 1,000 words than their Wikipedia counterparts.

The study also identified a bimodal pattern across similarity measures, indicating that some Grokipedia entries closely resemble Wikipedia entries, while others diverge substantially in content and structure. Researchers said the findings suggest Grokipedia is not a fully independent alternative to Wikipedia, but often appears as an AI-mediated reconfiguration of Wikipedia content.

The analysis examined ideological differences by evaluating the political orientation of cited news media sources. Researchers found that divergence was concentrated primarily in politically and culturally sensitive topics, including religion, history, politics and literature.

Within those areas, Grokipedia articles showed a relative shift toward more right-leaning cited sources than Wikipedia. However, the study also noted that sources cited on both platforms remained predominantly left-leaning.

Researchers argued that Wikipedia’s human editorial processes make disputes, revisions and bias visible and contestable, while AI-generated systems may embed bias within more opaque automated workflows that are harder to scrutinise publicly.

The paper also raised broader concerns about the governance of AI-generated knowledge systems. Researchers warned that AI-generated encyclopedic content could shape future training datasets and automated information ecosystems, potentially reproducing or amplifying bias without sufficient transparency, accountability or human oversight.

Why does it matter?

The findings add to growing debates over AI-generated knowledge systems, political bias, citation quality and transparency. As generative AI increasingly produces reference and educational material, the key question is not only whether outputs are accurate, but whether their sources, editorial assumptions and revisions can be scrutinised. Grokipedia’s differences from Wikipedia show how automated knowledge systems may reshape information governance while making some forms of bias less visible.

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