Your search
Results 17 resources
-
ARTICLE 19 contributed to a report aimed at EU institutions on improving the implementation of the public's right to access EU documents.
-
Discover how the European Parliament uses Anthropic's Claude AI to power Archibot, dramatically improving access to 2.1 million documents. Learn how this AI solution cuts search time by 80% and boosts user satisfaction, while maintaining ethical standards and security.
-
Climate-related disasters are destroying precious records.
-
ARTICLE 19 is seriously concerned about the UN Draft Convention on cybercrime, pending adoption by the UN General Assembly later in 2024.
-
As a graduate student at the College of Charleston, Lauren Davila found an ad for the auction of 600 enslaved people. A ProPublica story last year revealed her discovery and unearthed the identity of the family responsible for the sale.
-
We live in a paradoxical time of both data abundance and data scarcity: a lot of data is being created and stored, but it tends to be inaccessible due to private interests and weak regulations. The challenge, then, is to prevent the misuse of data whilst avoiding its missed use.
-
Croatia’s border police force appear to be burning clothing, mobile phones and passports seized from asylum seekers attempting to cross into the European Union before pushing them back to Bosnia.
-
Authorities' blocking of the Flow HK website is a clear attempt to censor a leading independent voice for Hong Kong and among the diaspora.
-
Recent research has underlined existing inequalities in artificial intelligence (AI) data production between developed and less-developed countries. An article in The Conversation demonstrated that while most data originates from wealthy countries, much of the less-valued quality-control labour is being outsourced to lower-income countries.
-
The CJEU ruling could have implications for AI training, where companies scrap data to train AI models, according to the European Center for Digital Rights (Noyb).
-
El término “crímenes de lesa humanidad” hace referencia a los crímenes cometidos como parte de un ataque generalizado y sistemático contra una población civil. Sacuden la conciencia de la propia humanidad. El primer proceso en el que se utilizó el término fueron los juicios de Núremberg contra dirigentes nazis el siglo pasado, en respuesta a los horrores del Holocausto.
-
Le terme « crime contre l’humanité » désigne certains crimes commis dans le cadre d’une attaque généralisée ou systématique contre une population civile. Ce sont des actes qui heurtent profondément la conscience de l’humanité. Ce terme a été utilisé pour la première fois devant une cour de justice au siècle dernier, lors du procès à Nuremberg des dirigeants nazis, pour qualifier les atrocités commises dans le cadre de l’Holocauste.
-
Crimes against humanity refer to certain crimes committed as part of widespread or systematic attacks against a civilian population. They shock the conscience of humanity itself. The first prosecution using the term occurred when Nazi leaders were tried at Nuremberg last century, in response to the horrors of the Holocaust.
-
Social media is increasingly important for documenting conflicts and atrocities as they occur, but efforts to store the data for the future are fragile and fragmentary
-
The International Organization for Migration (IOM) welcomes the recognition of its Displacement Tracking Matrix (DTM) as a lead provider of country-level data on internal displacement in the Inter-Agency Standing Committee (IASC) Management Response to the Independent Review of the Humanitarian Response to Internal Displacement
-
WikiLeaks founder says he pleaded ‘guilty to journalism’ in deal for his release and calls for protection of press freedom
-
The Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) signed an agreement that will help the collection and sharing of critical climate and weather data, advancing efforts to support climate adaptation and enhance regional climate coordination in Latin America and the Caribbean.
Explore
Resource
Resource type
- Blog Post (6)
- Newspaper Article (11)
Publication year
-
Between 2000 and 2025
(17)
-
Between 2020 and 2025
(17)
- 2024 (17)
-
Between 2020 and 2025
(17)
Online resource
- yes (17)