News

Summer School: Challenges of regulating the digital environment

The third Digital Rights Summer School was held from 25 to 31 August in Perast, Montenegro, gathering more than 40 journalists, activists and experts in the fields of AI, media, human rights, surveillance, and digital policy.

During five days of talks and workshops, numerous issues regarding the regulation of the digital environment were discussed and analysed. New EU regulations, i.e. the Digital Services Act, the Digital Markets Act and the Artificial Intelligence Act, and their implications for the Western Balkans were given particular attention. In addition, topics such as collective redress of digital rights, links between social justice and technology, counter-surveillance techniques and non-consensual intimate image abuse were also discussed.

Many thanks to all participants, lecturers, and guests for the exciting week we spent together! The program was organised by SHARE Foundation, European Digital Rights (EDRi) and Digital Freedom Fund.

We owe our gratitude for the support of the Summer School to the Gieskes-Strijbis Fondsthe Open Society Foundations Western Balkans and the Balkan Trust for Democracy. The Summer School was also supported by a core grant from the regional project SMART Balkans – Civil Society for a Connected Western Balkans, implemented by the Center for Civil Society Promotion (CPCD) in Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Center for Research and Policy Making (CRPM) in North Macedonia, and the Institute for Democracy and Mediation (IDM) in Albania, financially supported by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Kingdom of Norway.

Related content

BIRN and SHARE Join Efforts to Counter Digital Freedom Violations

In Southern and Eastern Europe, where online disinformation campaigns are increasingly endangering guaranteed individual freedoms and a notable decline in internet safety is ubiquitous, BIRN Hub will partner with SHARE Foundation to monitor digital threats and trends in their occurrence, raise awareness about violations of digital freedom and issue policy recommendations. The organisations will identify the main […]

SHARE has brought Google to Serbia

Any requests and objections which the citizens of Serbia may have regarding their personal data processed by Google, can now be resolved through the company’s representative in Serbia. Google, as one of the first tech-giants complying with the new Serbian law, wrote a letter to the Commissioner for Information of Public Importance and Personal Data Protection, […]

Total surveillance law proposed in Serbia

The public debate on the Draft Law on Internal Affairs has officially introduced into legal procedure provisions for the use of mass biometric surveillance in public spaces in Serbia, advanced technologies equipped with facial recognition software that enable capturing and processing of large amounts of sensitive personal data in real time. If Serbia adopts the provisions on mass biometric surveillance, […]