YOUthDIG 2026

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23 – 25 May 2026, YOUthDIG | 26 – 27 May 2026, EuroDIG
YOUthDIG programme 2026 | About EuroDIG 2026

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YOUthDIG Messages 2026

Group Ethics and Internet Governance

  1. Ethical data governance and leak prevention
    To prevent data leaks, combat unauthorized surveillance, and ensure the safety of publicly owned data, we must establish clear data ownership and absolute consistency in who and what manages this information. This requires a robust multi-stakeholder approach to enforce ethical internet governance standards and protect citizens' privacy from invasive surveillance practices.
  2. Inequalities and access to a safe digital environment
    To prevent data profiling such as in employment or education ( scholarship) we must regulate how AI algorithms are trained with our data in order to avoid bias. Especially some vulnerable categories such as women, lgbtq+ etc should not be targeted by harmful and illegal practices based on their status.
  3. Multi-stakeholders: implementations & regulations
    How companies can enforce the regulation, how users can implement them and how governments can monitor them? Everyone, from governments to big tech and everyday users, needs to work together so that policies don't just stay on paper but actually work in the real world.
  4. Putting people first in the age of AI
    We need to make it clear that real people and their jobs matter way more than any AI tool or technology. To keep the workplace safe and fair, governments and companies must use strict regulations that protect workers from being easily replaced or left behind.

Digital Impact on Children

  1. Children from a young age should learn about digital literacy and be empowered with agency and critical thinking skills, before having access to GenAI, and parents should be empowered to support their child’s cognitive development.
  2. Governments should invest in school mental health programs & NGOs to provide professional support for children to combat social media addiction, anxiety, cyberbullying, and other negative effects.
  3. Strengthen existing regulations (such as GDPR) to limit the collection of children’s data and the tracking of children online, and to remove existing data to prevent the targeting of ads.
  4. Social media platforms should be tailored to the evolving capacities of children; certain features should be restricted, and more parental controls should be included to create safe online spaces for children under 16 (for example, prohibiting addictive design and enhanced content moderation).

Disparities and Inclusion

  1. Age disparities in accessibility to the digital services (young in tech) - right to offline services
    Everyone should be included on online services or provided with suitable alternatives - older generations, marginalised groups based on their social-economic, migrant, and Roma backgrounds. To prevent them being excluded from online services, such as banking, e-commerce, and other digital government services.
    • Remedy by providing online services and also intergenerational workshops, including intergenerational tech labs.
    • Providing offline alternatives (banking services, e-commerce, healthcare services, customer service, and increasing digital access and intergenerational workshops (that could be facilitated by civil society).
  2. Access to the internet and opportunities in rural areas
    Everyone should have a right to access the internet, taking into account appropriate age groups, social background (even in rural areas).
    • Ensuring that access to the internet transforms into a human right.
    • Investment in internet infrastructure in rural areas to make sure that equal access to the internet is achieved, to improve opportunities (educational)
  3. Gender disparities, violence perpetuated through AI and social media
    • Currently, generative AI and social media platforms are allowing gender-based violence and discrimination being perpetrated, affecting minorities, women, people of color, LGBTQ communities, people with disabilities.
    • Models should incorporate people from various communities and backgrounds.
  4. Accessibility for people with disabilities
    • Ensuring that different internet platforms are designed to cater the needs of people with disabilities (such as partial blindness) and take them into account for initial dialogues on services development. Making sure this group is included in formulation of AI models, to avoid biases and guarantee accessibility.
  5. Data Centers (Sustainability)
    • FLAP- D markets i.e Frankfurt, London, Amsterdam, Paris, and Dublin are the places of IT hubs in Europe but most of the data centers are not just located in these regions but other regions such as the Nordics, Ireland, Netherlands etc.
    • Overall, Data centres do not appear randomly. They are built where power is cheap, water is available, and planning is easy in specific towns, in specific regions, serving a global digital economy and these communities did not create and do not equally access them.
    • When a hyperscale facility moves in, local electricity prices rise. Water tables shift. Grid capacity that once served homes is redirected. The people living there carry a real, material cost for infrastructure decisions made thousands of miles away, by companies they have no relationship with.
    • This is not just an environmental issue rather a disparity issue, and therefore to counter it we should design better policy that takes into account local communities and environmental impact, making sure that there’s transparency behind the building processes of these centers.
  6. HR / protecting people
    • Stronger measures must be taken to protect the people at the labour force of AI, including those that extract resources, moderate the content, which are usually outsourced outside of Europe by European companies.

Freedom of Expression and Disinformation

  1. Increased state-led surveillance amplifies fear of self-expression. To ensure that states do not abuse their digital competencies, we put forward both immediate action and long-term solutions to combat surveillance.

    Considering the lack of international legislation regarding the ability of states to conduct surveillance, we believe that developing state-sureveillance policies is critical to ensuring and maintaining citizens’ safety and right to freedom of speech. We would encourage / ask international bodies such as the EU to develop regulations that could implement checks and balances on states’ surveillance mechanisms. While establishing an agency responsible for such missions would be ideal, we acknowledge that the processes needed to create such an agency are extensive and require lengthy measures. This is why we advise for international legislation to be developed first, with the goal of creating and appointing an international independent body that could later take responsibility for supervising state surveillance issues.

    The necessary steps for the establishment of such an independent (intergovernmental) institution should be rapidly taken. Such an agency would have the authority to regulate state-surveillance and tackle related citizens’ privacy concerns.

  2. More and more individuals request medical advice from Artificial Intelligence Chatbots. These proceed to giving advice on medical issues with reduced visibility on the sources that were utilised, particularly when the sources are anonymous comments from online communities.

    To tackle this, we believe that AI should clearly specify the sources it used at the beginning of the response, to facilitate users’ understanding of differences between professional advice and advice originating from platforms users’ comments. Sources should also be written simultaneously per advice/ idea expressed. While we acknowledge that there is a bibliography included in generative AI responses, we believe that health-related issues advice shall specifically mention whether the advice is coming from medical experts to avoid worsening of symptoms.

  3. Harmful and hate-speech content on social media platforms and online communities are still flooded with too much harmful / hate-speech content.

    We support the idea of Implementing (AI?) algorithms that would detect harmful content (slurs, offensive words, death threats) / messages before being sent. These would notify the sender / person who is about to comment that what they are writing will be flagged as harmful, offensive etc. It would not censor the messages, allowing the users to proceed, however it would flag the comments once they are posted. After the comments are posted, they would be reported and verified against harmful content moderation and removed if found too offensive.

  4. Problem: Decreased media literacy and intense spread of mis- and dis-information

    Solution: More visibility on existing media literacy / disinformation detection campaigns and projects. There are a multitude of projects and initiatives supported by the EU which tackle the issue of media literacy and disinformation, offer trainings and workshops. However, these do not reach the target audience. The EU could allocate financial support to increase the visibility of such projects and ensure that more people are aware of their existence. This can be done via more social-media publicity. In the long-term, we advise that such visibility campaigns could reach people who do not have access to the internet, but are still affected by disinformation. Such campaigns could involve media literacy educational materials sent via post.

  5. Problem: It is increasingly difficult to distinguish AI images and videos from real ones. This can further increase the spread of disinformation or addictive behaviour.

    Solution: Make an obligation on labelling AI content on social media to limit the spread of disinformation.

About YOUthDIG

The Youth Dialogue on Internet Governance (YOUthDIG) is a yearly pre-event to the European Dialogue on Internet Governance (EuroDIG) aimed to foster active youth participation. Young people (ages 18-30) from the pan-European region with a strong interest in Internet governance, digital policy and cooperation are working together to draft and advocate for the youth messages.

Every year the YOUthDIG Organising Team is compiled of former YOUthDIG participants who design the programme for the upcoming edition. This is a chance to reflect and improve the programme from last editions, build further connections with YOUthDIG alumni and the EuroDIG community and to provide an opportunity for young people throughout Europe to participate in the Internet Governance Ecosystem focusing on topics that are important to youth in the field.

Find out more at our website.