Publication

10 Transatlantic Principles for a Healthy Online Information Space: Endorse them here!

14.06.2021

Our information space is plagued by a range of deficiencies that require concerted attention and balanced solutions.

The Alliance for Healthy Infosphere was founded by GLOBSEC in the summer of 2020 in order to help create a democratic, secure and accountable online information space in the EU and beyond.

The introduction and implementation of the following transatlantic principles represent key steps in enhancing these efforts and building societal resilience. The Alliance, consisting primarily of experts from smaller EU countries, has a unique knowledge of the current online information space.  Our goal is to generate tangible solutions to today’s most pressing informational problems.

By bringing together a range of stakeholders from various fields to endorse these principles, the Alliance will help guide society into a more inclusive, more democratic, information space. Once these principles are endorsed by relevant stakeholders from private, public and civil society sectors, we will help operationalize them in order to ensure a measurable, continuous impact upon societal resilience to issues of information manipulation.

Please join us on this path by endorsing these Transatlantic Principles for a Healthy Online Information Space below:

1. Strive for greater transparency in the online information space

The digital space should be transparent for its users. Companies and legislative bodies should work towards efficient regulatory frameworks that mandate verification and oversight processes, including mandated audits and greater transparency of algorithmic operations, clear rules on political advertising, better and more user-friendly reporting practices, clarity about efforts to curb information manipulation, and broader and more systematic platforms for data sharing amongst third party researchers. These efforts must be balanced alongside efforts to maintain robust standards for data privacy.

2. Empower users to make informed decisions about their data

Citizens have the right to user-friendly and easily accessible information about the use of their personal data & metadata online, including via microtargeting practices and/or third-party data-sharing. This access will enable users to make informed decisions about their own digital privacy, including further use of their data and what type of content they are exposed to. Technology firms bear responsibility for empowering their users to make such decisions, but the parameters of these responsibilities must be more clearly defined.

3. Foster a culture of digital responsibility and accountability

All stakeholders involved must do more to foster a culture of digital responsibility and accountability amongst the tech sector, the financial sector that supports technology (i.e. venture capital), governments, journalists, and civil society in order to create long-term user safety as well as healthy democratic discourse online. To do so, relevant stakeholders such as public institutions must define the responsibilities and generate corresponding systems of accountability for each group.

4. Minimize the spread of harmful information online

Online inauthentic behaviour and inorganic amplification are being used to share harmful and divisive content and manipulate people’s perceptions, at times without violating the social media companies’ terms of service. Relevant stakeholders need to work together to limit the potential virality of such content by raising the cost of information manipulation, consistently enforcing terms of services, and mitigating the use of inauthentic manipulation tactics.

5. Work towards timely, standardized and proportionate rules for the digital space

Timely implementation of standardized rules across various countries and digital platforms will foster cultures of fairness sorely needed in the online information environment. These rules must work to establish norms for intra-platform cooperation and should be informed by past experience. They should be future-facing and include room for proportionately regulating emerging and more closed forms of digital media technologies (i.e. voice-centric social media and encrypted chat applications). It is of the utmost importance that the implementation of such rules and norms is overseen by vetted independent institutions.

6. Support the ethical use of AI systems that embrace democracy and human rights

With the increasingly important role AI plays in the information environment, it is crucial to encourage the use of AI systems built with tangible frameworks of human rights and democracy in mind. Such systems must centre both human agency and oversight. They must respect user privacy, prioritize user safety, display operational transparency, and be built to detect and eliminate their own internal biases. These features will work to prevent AI and algorithm-borne political inequities and miscarriages of justice.

7. Develop tools to increase citizens’ media and digital literacy

All generations are impacted by the changing digital environment. A healthy infosphere needs public-private collaboration in developing and sharing tools aimed at improving digital literacy and critical thinking and AI readiness in order to increase citizens’ resilience to information manipulation online in the long term. Development of these skills must also be part of teaching curricula and employment trainings across the public and private sectors.

8. Empower civil society and the public to get involved

Civil society is integral to but underrepresented in, the fight to create a healthy online information space. Governments and technology firms must do more to give these groups equitable stakes in deliberative processes, better funding and resources to combat associated problems, and more access to relevant data. Civil society is uniquely positioned to offer innovative, culturally contextual, and hands-on solutions that will lead to better public awareness and more civic engagement on- and off- line. Simultaneously, all stakeholders must cultivate and prioritize collective public roles, and the associated capabilities of regular citizens, in combatting harmful information—because the general public is most affected by our presently unregulated digital space.

9. Nurture an open space for competition to avoid monopolies

Create competitive mechanisms including stronger enforcement of anti-trust legislation modelled on the broader media sector in order to ensure fairer access to opportunities offered by the digital space and prevent the development of monopolies. The emergence of public interest-minded platforms should be encouraged and small and medium-sized companies ought to have the right to mandated, equitable, stakes in the digital market without discrimination or constant threats of being subsumed and/or edged out of the online market.

10. Search for transatlantic solutions and beyond

The digital space is highly interconnected and common problems require common responses. Searching for solutions to create a truly democratic digital space on both sides of the Atlantic offers an alternative to non-democratic models. Furthermore, such a model will represent an opportunity to address current and future online challenges in a collaborative and more effective manner to countries and citizens across the globe.

10 Transatlantic Principles for a Healthy Online Information Space have been endorsed by: 

Wilhelm Molterer, Former Vice Chancellor and Finance Minister of Austria

Róbert Vass, President, GLOBSEC

Zoltán Varga, Chair of the Board, Central Media Group

Vladimír Bilčík, MEP, Group of the European People's Party, European Parliament

Roland Freudenstein, Policy Director, Wilfried Martens Centre

Markéta Gregorová, MEP, Group of the Greens European Parliament

Ľuboš Kukliš, Chair, European Platform of Regulatory Authorities

Marietje Schaake, Policy Director, Stanford University’s Cyber Policy Center 

George Tilesch, President, PHI Institute – For Augmented Intelligence

Rand Waltzman, Former Chief Technological Officer, RAND Corpopration

Samuel Woolley, Assistant Professor in the School of Journalism, University of Texas

Robert Mistrík, CEO and Founder, HighChem 

Naďa Kovalčíková, Program Manager, Alliance for Securing Democracy, The German Marshall Fund of the United States 

István Alföldi, Mind Mate Inspiration 

Alec Campbell, President and Principal Consultant, Excela Associates Inc. 

Jana Grittersova, Associate Professor, University of California 

Dominika Hajdu, Programme Manager, GLOBSEC 

Pavel Havlíček, Research Fellow, Association for International Affairs  

Peter Jančárik, Head of Social Impact Team & Partner, Seesame 

Matej Kandrík, Director, STRATPOL  

Kaloyan Kirilov, Analyst, Sociological Program, Center for the Study of Democracy  

Tomáš Kriššák, Partnerships and Communities Manager, Gerulata Technologies 

Justinas Kulys, Policy Analyst, Eastern Europe Studies Centre  

Stephanie McVicker, The Propwatch Project 

Ayman Mhanna, Executive Director, Samir Kassir Foundation 

Jozef Michal Mintál, Assistant Professor in the Department of Security Studies, Matej Bel University, Co-Director, UMB Data & Society Lab 

Giedrius Sakalauskas, Director, Res Publica - Civic Resilience Center  

Miroslava Sawiris, Senior Research Fellow, GLOBSEC 

Jonáš Syrovátka, Program Manager, Prague Security Studies Institute 

Martin Vladimirov, Senior Analyst, Economic Program, Center for the Study of Democracy 

Rufin Zamfir, Programmes Director, GlobalFocus Center 

 

To endorse the principles, please fill-in the survey here