System Reset: Technology for a Democratic Europe

 

Saturday, 25 April

10:00 – 11:30 

Room: Salle de Guichets 

Digital technologies increasingly constitute the very infrastructure of our democracies, underpinning everything from voting systems to energy grids, armies and bureaucracies, healthcare and education, economic life and public debate. While the notion of technology being “neutral” was always an illusion, today Europe finds itself increasingly exposed to the blackmail of billionaires and foreign autocrats, undermining democratic agency, public trust, and collective autonomy.

This plenary seeks to move beyond both techno-optimism and purely defensive regulation to articulate counter narratives on technology and European sovereignty. Bringing together perspectives from Green politics, academia, industry, it asks what the foundations for an alternative vision could look like. What if we designed technology to serve people, prioritising participation over surveillance and resilience over dependency? And how can Europe reclaim technological agency when digital systems increasingly risk hollowing out trust, participation, and autonomy?

Speakers

 

Frank Karlitschek, CEO NextCloud

Frank Karlitschek is a long time open source contributor and former board member of the KDE e.V. He Nextcloud in 2016 to create a fully open source and decentralized alternative to big centralized cloud companies. Frank was an invited expert at the W3C to help to create the ActivityPub standard. Frank has spoken at MIT, CERN, Harvard and ETH and keynoted many events. Frank is the founder and CEO of Nextcloud GmbH. He is also a fellow of Open Forum Europe and an advisor to the United Nations regarding Open Source. Frank won the European SFS Free Software Award 2023 and the Acteurs du Libre European Award 2023.

Prof. Shannon Vallor, Co-Director, Centre for Technomoral Futures, author The AI Mirror: How to Reclaim Our Humanity in an Age of Machine Thinking 

Prof. Shannon Vallor is the Baillie Gifford Chair of the Ethics of Data and Artificial Intelligence at the University of Edinburgh, where she serves as Co-Director of the Centre for Technomoral Futures and the UKRI BRAID (Bridging Responsible AI Divides) programme. Professor Vallor’s research explores how AI and robotics reshape human character and capabilities. She is a former AI Ethicist at Google, a standing member of Stanford University’s 100-Year Study of Artificial Intelligence, and the 2026 recipient of the Barwise Prize from the American Philosophical Association. Her most recent book is The AI Mirror: How to Reclaim Our Humanity in an Age of Machine Thinking (Oxford University Press 2024).

Cyrielle Chatelain, MP, Europe Écologie Les Verts

Renata Ávila Pinto, CEO, Open Knowledge Foundation

Moderator: Seden Anlar, Journalist, Climate Communicator

Seden Anlar is a Brussels-based multimedia journalist, moderator, and podcast producer focused on human rights and holding power to account through storytelling. Over the past eight years, she has produced more than a dozen podcasts on climate, migration, social, and tech justice—reaching over 200,000 listeners across Europe and beyond, combining rigorous reporting with audience-centred storytelling to connect the dots between borders, histories, and movements.