Based on a Diplo interview with Jovan Kurbalija, Executive Director of Diplo, conducted by Maricela Muñoz.
Few places embody the history of international diplomacy as vividly as Geneva’s Alabama Room. It was here, in 1864, that representatives of European states signed the first Geneva Convention, laying the foundations of modern international humanitarian law. The same room also hosted negotiations that resolved the Alabama Claims, an arbitration between the United States and the United Kingdom that became a landmark in the peaceful settlement of international disputes.
More than 160 years later, the room continues to host conversations about another challenge with global implications – AI. While the technologies have changed dramatically, the underlying questions remain remarkably familiar. How can societies govern transformative innovations responsibly? How can competing interests find common ground? And how can international cooperation keep pace with technologies evolving faster than regulation?
These themes formed the basis of a recent Diplo interview with Jovan Kurbalija, Executive Director of Diplo, who reflected on Geneva’s historical legacy and its continuing relevance for AI governance. His central argument is that understanding the future of AI requires more than technical expertise. It also requires revisiting the intellectual traditions, diplomatic culture, and human values that have shaped Geneva for centuries.
History offers principles, not ready-made answers
Kurbalija cautions against treating history as a collection of simple solutions.
‘History does not provide us ready-made lessons. Our moment is unique in many respects.’
Instead, history provides something more enduring, the principles that continue to guide societies confronting new challenges.
Standing inside the Alabama Room, Kurbalija described history as something that ‘echoes across time.’ Rather than searching for direct historical parallels, he suggested imagining the negotiators who once walked through Geneva’s streets before gathering around the same table to discuss humanitarian protection or peaceful dispute settlement.
The technologies confronting today’s diplomats are different, yet many of the qualities that enabled successful negotiations remain unchanged. Patience, dialogue, respect for opposing views, and the willingness to seek common ground continue to underpin effective diplomacy.
As governments, international organisations, companies, researchers, and civil society grapple with AI governance, these diplomatic traditions may be more relevant than ever.
Geneva’s enduring values: Inclusion and compromise
For Kurbalija, Geneva’s importance extends well beyond the concentration of international organisations located around the city.
Its defining contribution lies in a diplomatic culture built around inclusion and compromise.
Inclusion has long characterised Geneva’s approach to international negotiations. Whether discussing humanitarian law in the nineteenth century or AI governance today, meaningful outcomes depend on ensuring that all those affected have a voice.
That principle has become particularly important for AI governance.
‘We should have AI companies, but we must have governments, communities, citizens, marginal groups all over the world.’
The observation reflects one of the central challenges of AI governance. Decisions about AI increasingly affect education, healthcare, employment, security, trade, and human rights. Consequently, discussions cannot remain confined to governments and technology companies alone.
Kurbalija identifies compromise as the second defining Geneva principle.
‘Compromise is not a very popular word today.’
Yet he argues that compromise represents an ethical strength rather than a weakness. It requires recognising that different actors hold legitimate interests and finding solutions that, while imperfect, remain acceptable to everyone involved.
In an era increasingly shaped by geopolitical competition over AI, these principles may prove as valuable as any technological breakthrough.
EspriTech de Genève: When history speaks to AI
One of the interview’s most distinctive ideas is Kurbalija’s concept of EspriTech de Genève.
Drawing inspiration from the traditional Esprit de Genève, which reflects the city’s humanitarian and diplomatic heritage, EspriTech de Genève explores how thinkers associated with Geneva anticipated many of today’s debates about technology, knowledge, and humanity.
Rather than beginning with computers, Kurbalija traces AI governance back through centuries of philosophy, literature, linguistics, and science.
Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, written near Geneva more than two centuries ago, provides perhaps the most familiar example. The novel tells the story of a scientist whose creation ultimately escapes his control.
‘It is the eternal reminder of the human drive to push the frontier, to invent, to discover new things—and at the same time the human predicament that the very invention we developed could hurt humanity.’
For Kurbalija, the novel remains strikingly relevant as societies debate increasingly capable AI systems. The question is no longer simply whether humans can build powerful technologies, but how they can ensure those technologies remain aligned with human interests.
Another recurring influence is Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges, whose works explored uncertainty, knowledge, and the limits of human understanding. Reflecting on Borges’ observation that humanity must continue building ‘as if the sand were stone,’ Kurbalija argues that uncertainty is not a flaw to eliminate but a defining feature of human existence.
Attempts to achieve complete certainty through technology, he suggests, risk repeating an ancient mistake, believing that humans can fully master complexity.
Rousseau, Bonnet and Saussure: forgotten foundations of the AI age
The interview also revisits several Genevan thinkers whose ideas continue to resonate in discussions about AI.
Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s concept of the social contract raises questions about human agency in an increasingly digital society. If knowledge becomes concentrated within a handful of large AI systems, Kurbalija argues, societies may need to reconsider how citizens exercise autonomy, participate in democratic life, and realise their potential.
Charles Bonnet, an eighteenth-century Genevan natural philosopher, appears as an unexpectedly modern figure. Fascinated by recurring patterns in nature, Bonnet studied the mathematical organisation of leaves and explored how seemingly complex biological systems emerge from underlying structures.
According to Kurbalija, Bonnet’s search for patterns anticipated, in remarkably abstract form, today’s machine learning systems, which likewise identify statistical relationships within vast quantities of information.
Language itself forms another bridge between Geneva’s intellectual history and contemporary AI.
Swiss linguist Ferdinand de Saussure transformed linguistics by distinguishing between the structure of language and its meaning. Although writing decades before computers existed, his work laid conceptual foundations that later influenced computational linguistics and, indirectly, today’s large language models.
‘If AI companies ever had to pay royalties for ideas,’ Kurbalija jokes, ‘Saussure’s successors would probably earn quite a bit.’
Behind the humour lies a serious point, that AI did not emerge in an intellectual vacuum. It builds upon centuries of inquiry into language, knowledge, communication, and human cognition.
Human-centred AI begins with human values
Throughout the conversation, Kurbalija repeatedly returns to one theme, that AI governance is ultimately about people rather than machines.
The phrase ‘human-centred AI’ appears frequently in international discussions, yet he argues that its meaning deserves closer examination.
What does it actually mean to place humans at the centre of AI? For Kurbalija, the answer lies in humility.
Drawing once again on Frankenstein, he argues that technological ambition should always be accompanied by recognition of human limitations.
‘We should have humility,’ he says.
Rather than pursuing AI for its own sake, societies should ask how technology can support human dignity, creativity, education, and well-being.
He also highlights the principle of subsidiarity, the idea that decisions should be taken as closely as possible to the people affected by them. Applied to AI, this means involving citizens, educators, local communities, researchers, and smaller organisations alongside governments and major technology companies.
Broad participation, he argues, helps ensure that AI is perceived not as an external force imposed upon society, but as a tool developed with society.
Geneva’s next chapter
Geneva’s role in AI governance continues to evolve.The city already hosts initiatives such as the AI for Good Global Summit, the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS), and numerous discussions on AI governance involving governments, international organisations, academia, civil society, and the private sector.
It is also expected to host the AI Summit in 2027, further reinforcing its position as one of the world’s principal centres for international dialogue on emerging technologies.
Image via Freepik
Yet Kurbalija believes Geneva’s greatest contribution lies not in the number of meetings it convenes but in the diplomatic culture it represents.Its traditions of inclusion, dialogue, compromise, and respect for human dignity offer an important counterbalance at a time when AI discussions are increasingly shaped by geopolitical competition, technological rivalry, and commercial pressures.
He concludes the interview with three messages for policymakers:
The first is to avoid what he calls ‘chrono-narcissism’, the belief that every challenge is entirely new and disconnected from history.
The second is to approach AI with humility, recognising both its extraordinary potential and its inherent risks.
The third is to ensure that AI governance remains genuinely inclusive by bringing decision-making closer to the people whose lives the technology will affect.
These principles echo far beyond Geneva.
As AI becomes embedded in nearly every aspect of society, debates about governance are becoming less about technology itself and more about the values that should guide its development. In that respect, Geneva’s greatest contribution may not be a particular regulatory model or institutional framework, but a reminder that diplomacy, dialogue, and humanity remain as essential in the AI era as they were when the first Geneva Convention was signed more than a century and a half ago.
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The Internet Watch Foundation (IWF) and the UK’s National Crime Agency (NCA) have launched new guidance urging parents and carers to better protect images of their children online, warning that criminals are increasingly using AI to turn publicly available photographs into child sexual abuse material.
The guidance accompanies a public awareness campaign across Facebook, Instagram and YouTube, encouraging families to review privacy settings, reconsider who can access children’s photographs and discuss image consent with young people.
Parents are encouraged to regularly review whether they are comfortable sharing images online, limit access through private groups where appropriate, and talk openly with their children about AI-generated imagery, deepfake nudes and online safety.
The campaign follows growing evidence that offenders are exploiting publicly accessible family and school photographs.
The IWF recently helped prevent the circulation of more than 100 AI-generated sexual images created from photographs taken from a UK school’s website after criminals attempted to blackmail the school. According to the organisations, even ordinary family photographs can now be manipulated into realistic abuse material without the knowledge of children or their parents.
The scale of the threat has grown significantly. The IWF identified 8,029 AI-generated child sexual abuse images and videos in 2025, a 14% increase on the previous year.
AI-generated videos increased from just 13 identified in 2024 to 3,443 in 2025, with nearly two-thirds classified as the UK’s most severe Category A abuse material.
The IWF argues that technology companies must strengthen safeguards around AI image generation tools before release, while continuing to support law enforcement efforts to combat online child exploitation.
Why does it matter?
Generative AI has made it significantly easier to create realistic child sexual abuse material from ordinary photographs, fundamentally changing the online child protection landscape. Images shared on social media, school websites or other public platforms can now be manipulated without a child’s knowledge, creating new risks for families and increasing the burden on law enforcement and child protection organisations.
The campaign also highlights that preventing AI-enabled abuse requires more than criminal enforcement. Stronger safeguards in AI image-generation tools, improved privacy practices, greater parental awareness and better digital literacy around image sharing and consent are all becoming essential components of online child safety.
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The International Telecommunication Union (ITU) has highlighted a new generation of AI researchers developing practical tools to strengthen digital trust, improve content authenticity and combat misinformation.
Ahead of the AI for Good Global Summit in Geneva, the Young Researcher Associate Programme is showcasing projects designed to improve multimedia authenticity, helping people identify manipulated content while supporting creativity and innovation in the age of generative AI.
The initiative operates under the AI and Multimedia Authenticity Standards Collaboration, established in 2024 by the World Standards Cooperation, which brings together the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC), the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) and the ITU.
The programme brings together early-career researchers from universities around the world to develop solutions addressing content authenticity, provenance and digital rights as AI-generated media becomes increasingly common online.
Three flagship projects illustrate the programme’s multidisciplinary approach. STOP&SCAN promotes critical thinking through a five-step framework that encourages people to assess the source, content and context of digital information before sharing it.
AMITO provides an AI-powered multimedia integrity toolkit through Telegram and WhatsApp, analysing suspicious images and videos while explaining its findings in plain language rather than simply labelling content as authentic or fake.
Meanwhile, the Policy-as-Code project maps AI-related regulations across jurisdictions, helping creators, businesses and policymakers understand how AI-generated content is regulated while laying the foundations for machine-readable compliance mechanisms.
The researchers will present their work at the AI for Good Global Summit on 9 July, demonstrating how technical innovation, behavioural science and regulatory frameworks can work together to build more trustworthy digital ecosystems. According to the ITU, strengthening digital trust requires collaboration across generations, disciplines and countries.
According to ITU, designing digital trust requires collaboration across generations, disciplines and countries to ensure AI strengthens rather than undermines confidence in online information.
Why does it matter?
As generative AI makes it easier to create convincing synthetic media, verifying the authenticity and provenance of digital content is becoming increasingly important for governments, businesses and the public. Technical tools alone are unlikely to solve the problem, making user education, common standards and transparent governance equally important.
The initiative also highlights the growing role of international standards organisations in shaping AI governance. By combining authenticity technologies, regulatory mapping and practical educational tools, the ITU and its partners are helping develop a shared foundation for trusted digital ecosystems that can operate across platforms and national borders.
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Spain has called for stronger regulation of AI and algorithmic management in the workplace, arguing that digital technologies should strengthen workers’ rights rather than undermine them.
Speaking at the VI Ibero-American Ministerial Conference on Labour in Avilés, Spain’s Second Vice President and Minister of Labour, Yolanda Díaz, urged governments across the region to establish governance frameworks that ensure transparency, human oversight and the ethical use of AI in employment.
The conference focused on two priorities shaping the future of work. Ministers agreed on the need to professionalise, formalise and improve working conditions in the care sector, recognising its economic and social importance while addressing the precarious conditions faced by many workers, particularly women.
The meeting concluded with the adoption of the Avilés Ministerial Declaration and the Ibero-American Commitment on the Social and Solidarity Economy 2026–2030. Together, the documents establish shared principles on care work, algorithmic governance and labour rights while strengthening regional cooperation to promote inclusive economic development, quality employment and more resilient labour markets ahead of the XXX Ibero-American Summit in Madrid later this year.
At the same time, the commitment strengthens regional cooperation to promote inclusive economic development, quality employment and more resilient labour markets ahead of the XXX Ibero-American Summit scheduled to take place in Madrid later this year.
Why does it matter?
The conference reflects growing international concern that AI is reshaping the workplace faster than labour regulations are evolving. By calling for greater transparency, human oversight and accountability in algorithmic management, Spain is arguing that AI should improve working conditions without weakening workers’ rights or limiting human decision-making.
The adoption of shared regional principles also highlights how labour policy is becoming an increasingly important part of AI governance. As algorithmic systems play a larger role in hiring, scheduling, performance management and other employment decisions, governments are placing greater emphasis on ensuring that technological innovation remains aligned with fairness, inclusion and decent work.
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India has reaffirmed its commitment to placing people at the centre of AI during the 29th National Conference on e-Governance, where Union Minister Dr Jitendra Singh said ‘Human-led Artificial Intelligence’ will guide the country’s journey towards Viksit Bharat 2047.
Held under the theme ‘Viksit Bharat 2047: AI-enabled, Data-driven and Secure Digital Governance’, the conference brought together policymakers, technology experts, researchers, industry representatives and public administrators to discuss the future of digital government.
The conference concluded with the adoption of the Jaipur Declaration, which sets out a strategic roadmap for AI-enabled, secure and citizen-centric governance. It also recognised 17 digital governance initiatives through the National e-Governance Awards 2026, highlighting innovation across ministries, states, local governments and research institutions.
Throughout the event, speakers presented AI as a tool to strengthen public administration while preserving democratic accountability. Singh stressed that AI should enhance institutional capacity rather than replace human responsibility.
He highlighted several flagship initiatives, including the Centralized Public Grievance Redress and Monitoring System, the multilingual AI chatbot SAMADHAN DIDI developed with BHASHINI, the National e-Governance Service Delivery Assessment, Mission Karmayogi and the IndiaAI Mission, all intended to improve efficiency, accessibility and citizen engagement.
Singh also said India’s long-term digital strategy extends beyond technology deployment. Capacity building for civil servants, administrative reform, secure Digital Public Infrastructure and responsible AI governance are all seen as essential to achieving the country’s 2047 development ambitions. According to Singh, AI should accelerate public service delivery while remaining grounded in ethics, constitutional values and human oversight.
According to Dr Singh, technology should accelerate governance while remaining firmly guided by ethics, constitutional values and human oversight.
Why does it matter?
India is positioning AI as a tool to strengthen public administration rather than replace human decision-making. By emphasising human oversight, ethics and citizen-centred services, the government is seeking to balance technological innovation with democratic accountability as AI becomes more deeply integrated into public institutions.
The Jaipur Declaration also signals that AI is becoming a long-term pillar of India’s digital governance strategy. Combined with investments in Digital Public Infrastructure, civil service capacity development and multilingual AI services, the approach could shape how other countries integrate AI into public administration while maintaining public trust.
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Ireland’s government has introduced the Regulation of AI Bill 2026, with Digital Transformation Minister Niamh Smyth describing the legislation as essential to protecting citizens while supporting innovation during its Second Stage debate in the Dáil.
The Bill is intended to give full effect to the EU AI Act in Ireland by establishing the national institutions needed to supervise and enforce the regulation ahead of the EU implementation deadline of 2 August 2026.
A central element of the Bill is the establishment of the AI Office of Ireland as an independent statutory body. The office will act as Ireland’s national point of contact with the European Commission and other member states, oversee enforcement of the AI Act, promote AI literacy and innovation, and operate a regulatory sandbox for start-ups and small and medium-sized enterprises.
Smyth acknowledged both the opportunities and risks presented by AI, highlighting advances in areas such as healthcare and scientific research while warning that, without appropriate safeguards, the technology could reinforce discrimination, manipulate behaviour and exploit vulnerabilities. She emphasised that the Bill is an implementing measure and does not introduce obligations beyond those already established by the EU AI Act.
Smyth also said the legislation would strengthen Ireland’s position as an ‘EU centre of excellence and digital regulatory hub‘. She argued that a robust enforcement framework would provide businesses with the regulatory certainty needed to invest and innovate, with the government seeking passage of the Bill before the August deadline.
Why does it matter?
Ireland’s implementation of the EU AI Act carries particular significance because many of the world’s largest technology companies base their European operations there. The establishment of an independent AI Office with enforcement responsibilities and a regulatory sandbox positions Ireland as a key player in applying the EU’s AI rules in practice.
The legislation also illustrates the broader challenge facing EU member states as the AI Act enters into force. Governments must rapidly establish the institutions, expertise and enforcement mechanisms needed to supervise AI systems while providing businesses with regulatory certainty and supporting continued innovation.
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The United States has announced a series of new initiatives under the Pax Silica partnership aimed at strengthening AI supply chain security, expanding international cooperation on AI, and supporting advanced manufacturing capabilities among participating economies.
The announcements were made following the 2026 Pax Silica Summit, the second meeting of the initiative launched by the US Department of State in December 2025. Pax Silica focuses on strengthening economic security and resilient supply chains across sectors, including semiconductors, critical minerals, advanced manufacturing, energy inputs, AI, and digital infrastructure, through cooperation among participating countries.
One of the summit’s principal outcomes was the signing of a Joint Statement on AI Opportunity by the United States and nearly three dozen partner economies. According to the US Department of State, the statement promotes a pro-innovation and pro-growth approach to AI governance while emphasising secure AI supply chains and support for startups, developers, and private-sector innovation. Signatories include countries from Europe, the Indo-Pacific, the Middle East, and Latin America, including Australia, Germany, India, Japan, the Republic of Korea, Singapore, the United Kingdom, and the United States.
The summit also expanded the Pax Silica partnership itself. Ten additional participants, including Argentina, Chile, Costa Rica, El Salvador, the European Union, Germany, Greece, Kazakhstan, the Netherlands, and Panama, joined the initiative, bringing the total number of signatories to 24. Taiwan continues to support the initiative’s principles through a separate joint statement on economic security cooperation with the United States.
Another announcement focused on strengthening the security and transparency of AI supply chains. The US Department of State plans to launch a competitive funding programme for a pilot AI Assistance Project in Panama to develop an AI supply chain credentialing and provenance platform. According to the Department, the proposed platform would integrate with customs authorities, ports, and logistics systems to help verify and facilitate shipments of semiconductors, AI infrastructure, critical minerals, and other strategic goods. If successfully implemented in Panama, the project could later be expanded to additional Pax Silica partners.
The summit also introduced Foundry School, a workforce development initiative established jointly by the US Department of State and Stanford University. The programme will begin with seminars at Stanford for entrepreneurs and industrial leaders and will be complemented by an advanced manufacturing curriculum that participating educational institutions across Pax Silica economies will be able to adopt. The initiative aims to strengthen expertise in advanced manufacturing, recognising its growing importance for both economic competitiveness and technological development.
Pax Silica reflects broader government efforts to strengthen resilience across AI-related supply chains as geopolitical competition increasingly intersects with technological development. In recent years, countries have introduced a range of policies covering semiconductor production, critical minerals, export controls, and trusted technology partnerships, while also seeking to balance innovation with economic and national security considerations.
The summit’s outcomes indicate that Pax Silica is evolving beyond a policy dialogue into a broader cooperation framework encompassing AI governance, supply chain security, industrial capacity, and workforce development. Whether the initiatives announced at the summit expand beyond their initial pilot phase will depend on implementation by participating governments and continued international cooperation among partner economies.
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OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has called for the creation of a US-led international forum to establish global safety standards for AI, arguing that no single country or company should dominate the governance of increasingly capable AI systems.
Writing in an opinion article published in the Financial Times, Altman proposed an international body bringing together governments, independent technical experts, and other stakeholders to develop accepted AI safety standards, provide impartial assessments of AI capabilities and risks, and make advanced AI technologies available to countries and organisations that participate in and comply with agreed rules.
According to Altman, such a forum could also serve as a governance mechanism for frontier AI developers, helping to reduce commercial pressures that may encourage companies to prioritise rapid deployment over safety. He argued that international cooperation has previously enabled countries to manage other strategically important technologies despite geopolitical competition.
To illustrate his proposal, Altman pointed to existing international governance mechanisms such as the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), which oversees the peaceful use of nuclear technology, as well as global aviation safety frameworks and international financial standards. In his view, these models demonstrate that countries can establish common rules for technologies with significant cross-border implications while maintaining national interests.
Altman also argued that the benefits of AI should be shared more broadly, writing that ‘everyone on Earth should benefit from this technology and determine for themselves how best to use it.’ His proposal follows discussions at the recent Group of Seven (G7) summit in France, where executives from OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google DeepMind met with political leaders to discuss international approaches to governing advanced AI models.
A key challenge for any international oversight mechanism, however, remains enforcement. Unlike nuclear facilities or aircraft, frontier AI models are developed within highly secured data centres, making independent verification considerably more difficult. The limited visibility into model training, testing, and deployment has led many experts to question how compliance with international AI standards could be monitored in practice.
Altman’s proposal is not the first call for stronger international oversight of advanced AI. OpenAI and Anthropic have previously supported the idea of international governance mechanisms for frontier AI systems. Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei has argued for a more prescriptive regulatory approach, drawing comparisons with the US Federal Aviation Administration and advocating stronger regulatory oversight for highly capable AI models.
The proposal also comes as governments continue to expand their involvement in AI governance. Alongside national regulatory initiatives, international discussions have accelerated through forums such as the G7, the Global Partnership on AI (GPAI), and the UN.
Earlier this week, the UN’s Independent International Scientific Panel on Artificial Intelligence published its first preliminary assessment of AI opportunities, risks, and governance challenges ahead of the inaugural Global Dialogue on AI Governance in Geneva, reflecting growing international efforts to establish evidence-based approaches to AI governance.
Whether Altman’s proposal develops into a formal international initiative will ultimately depend on governments rather than AI companies. Commenting on broader discussions around AI governance, analysts at the Brookings Institution argued that cooperation between governments and leading AI developers could help establish common standards, but stressed that any future international framework would need effective implementation and enforcement mechanisms rather than relying solely on voluntary commitments.
As governments, international organisations, and AI developers continue debating how to govern increasingly capable AI systems, Altman’s proposal adds to a growing conversation about whether existing institutions are sufficient or whether new international mechanisms will be needed to manage the opportunities and risks associated with frontier AI.
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The University of Wisconsin-Madison has launched its College of Computing & Artificial Intelligence (CAI), the institution’s first new college in more than four decades.
The new college brings together the departments of Computer Sciences, Statistics and the Information School, building on the School of Computer, Data & Information Sciences established in 2019.
The college will focus on computing and AI education and research while promoting collaboration across fields including health, engineering, business, the social sciences, the arts and the humanities.
The university also plans to launch new academic programmes, recruit 50 faculty members over the coming years and expand partnerships with industry and government to strenthen research, education and innovation.
Why does it matter?
The creation of a dedicated College of Computing & Artificial Intelligence reflects the growing importance universities are placing on AI as a cross-disciplinary field rather than a specialised area within computer science. By bringing together expertise from multiple disciplines, the university aims to prepare students and researchers to address the technical, social and ethical challenges of AI.
The investment also highlights intensifying competition among higher education institutions to attract talent, research funding and industry partnerships in AI. Expanding faculty, academic programmes and collaboration with government and business positions the university to play a larger role in developing the next generation of AI research and workforce skills.
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Europol’s Cyber Defenders initiative has won the 2026 European Ombudsman Award for Good Administration.
The free educational game, built on Roblox, is designed to help children recognise online risks and develop safer behaviour in digital environments.
Cyber Defenders received the overall award, selected from 48 nominations submitted by the EU institutions, bodies and agencies. It also won the Excellence in Technological Innovation and the Use of AI category award.
The game teaches children about risks such as fraud, identity theft and online grooming through interactive missions rather than traditional awareness campaigns.
Europol says the project was developed to reach children in online gaming environments they already use, while making them more comfortable asking for help when they encounter risks.
The agency has also published supporting resources for teachers, parents and schools, including a game guide, lesson assessment, poster and letter to parents.
The award follows earlier recognition of Europol digital initiatives, including Trace An Object, which uses public participation to help identify victims of child sexual abuse.
Why does it matter?
Cyber Defenders shows how law enforcement agencies are experimenting with interactive tools to improve children’s digital safety skills. Game-based learning can make online safety more relevant for younger users, especially in gaming environments where risks such as grooming, scams and identity theft may appear. The award also reflects broader recognition that digital literacy and prevention are part of child online safety, alongside regulation, enforcement and platform accountability.
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