Empowering Individuals and Strengthening Resilience in an AI-Driven Information Environment


Permanent Mission of Latvia

Session 187

Tuesday, 7 July 2026 11:00–11:45 (UTC+02:00) Physical (on-site) and Virtual (remote) participation Room H2, ITU Montbrillant Building Coffee will be served before the session Interactive Session
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Physical (on-site) and Virtual (remote) participation


The attention of the international policy community is increasingly drawn to impact of general-purpose AI on societies and economies. While this technological progress creates important opportunities for innovation, education and economic development, it also raises significant challenges for information integrity, trust in the digital public sphere, democratic discourse, and even human autonomy. 

Against this backdrop, societies face an urgent question: how can individuals remain informed, and resilient in an AI-driven information environment?

The WSIS+20 Review, concluded at the United Nations General Assembly in December 2025, reaffirmed the global commitment to a people-centered, inclusive and development-oriented information society grounded in human rights. The outcome document highlights that, as digital technologies become deeply embedded in all aspects of social and economic life, the key challenge is no longer only expanding connectivity but ensuring that digital ecosystems remain trustworthy, safe and resilient.

In the meantime, these goals are being tested by the rapid development of generative AI, while it is transforming the information environment at an unprecedented pace. Several emerging risks deserve particular attention: the malicious use of AI to manipulate information, including increasingly sophisticated technologies that are accessible to wide group of people; the use of algorithmic amplification and micro-targeting to target and influence public opinion and split public discourse; social and political biases embedded in training data or algorithms, which may reproduce or reinforce social inequalities and lead to systemic misrepresentation or exclusion of vulnerable and historically underserved groups; the erosion of trust in democratic institutions and digital public spaces as users struggle to distinguish between authentic and synthetic content.

At the same time, general‑purpose AI offers important opportunities to strengthen information ecosystems. AI‑based tools can help detect manipulated or synthetic content, identify coordinated information operations, and support fact‑checking and media verification.  They can also advance media and digital literacy, helping individuals better understand how information is produced, distributed and potentially manipulated online. If developed and deployed responsibly, general‑purpose AI can enhance accessibility, inclusion and participation by improving language access, assistive technologies and information access for persons with disabilities, and by expanding digital access, skills and meaningful participation for women and girls and other underserved communities.

Harnessing these opportunities while mitigating the risks should be a priority for all stakeholders. As countries increasingly adopt AI to drive economic development and innovation, they must also invest in policies and capabilities that safeguard information integrity and empower individuals to critically engage with digital content.

Panellists
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H.E. Mr. Ivars Pundurs Permanent Representative of the Republic of Latvia to the UN in Geneva Permanent Mission of the Republic of Latvia to the UN in Geneva Opening remarks

Ms. Guna Puce
Ms. Guna Puce Director National AI Centre of Latvia

Guna Puce is a lawyer by education and a change-maker by nature. Her career has evolved at the intersection of law, technology, and leadership. She currently leads the National AI Centre of Latvia - an organisation jointly established by the government, universities, and the private sector to coordinate and promote the responsible use of artificial intelligence in Latvia. The Centre serves as a bridge between policymakers, businesses, researchers, and society, creating the conditions for AI to develop in a safe, responsible, and meaningful way.


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Mr. Michael Camilleri Chief Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) in Geneva

Ms. Ayisha Piotti
Ms. Ayisha Piotti Global independent expert on AI Policy, Manager Partner of Reghorizon Reghorizon

A globally recognised independent expert, thought leader and bridge builder in AI policy. Dedicated to ensuring emerging technologies ethically serve society and future generations, her cross-sector career spans over two decades across the United Nations, multinational industry, and public office, as a local parliamentarian. As Managing Partner of the think tank RegHorizon and Founder of the global AI Policy Summit in Zurich for Switzerland, she has established one of Europe’s most influential multi-stakeholder dialogue platforms on AI while regularly advising international governance bodies, industry ethics councils, and elite academic institutions worldwide.


Dr. Daniel Dobos
Dr. Daniel Dobos Research Director at Swisscom Swisscom

Dr. Daniel Dobos bridges cutting-edge research with real-world customer solutions, most recently as Research Director at Swisscom. He co-chairs the ITU AI for Good Impact Initiative and chairs the Swiss AI Standardisation Commission. Previously, he led AI and data analysis projects at CERN — contributing to the landmark Higgs boson discovery — and at the United Nations. His research spans artificial intelligence, quantum computing, graph neural networks, and particle physics, with publications cited tens of thousands of times. Educated at TU Dortmund with affiliations at Lancaster University and CERN, he is a leading voice at the intersection of science, AI, and societal impact.


Mr. Viktors Makarovs
Mr. Viktors Makarovs Envoy on Digital aAffairs Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Latvia Moderator

Viktors Makarovs is the first Envoy on Digital Affairs appointed at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Latvia. His current focus is information integrity and security and the impact of AI. Since 2014, he has led the Ministry’s work on disinformation, focusing on EU policies and international cooperation. Before joining the Ministry in 2011, Viktors acquired a background in the Latvian NGO think-tanking community where his two main interests were Latvian political culture and Russia’s foreign and domestic policy. He holds a degree in Political Science from the University of Copenhagen, Denmark.


Topics
Artificial Intelligence Digital Inclusion Digital Skills Digital Transformation Emerging Technologies Human Rights Media
WSIS Action Lines
  • AL C4 logo C4. Capacity building
  • AL C9 logo C9. Media
  • AL C10 logo C10. Ethical dimensions of the Information Society
Sustainable Development Goals
  • Goal 5 logo Goal 5: Achieve gender equality and empower all women and girls
  • Goal 9 logo Goal 9: Build resilient infrastructure, promote sustainable industrialization and foster innovation
  • Goal 16 logo Goal 16: Promote just, peaceful and inclusive societies
GDC Objectives
  • Objective 3: Foster an inclusive, open, safe and secure digital space that respects, protects and promotes human rights
  • Objective 5: Enhance international governance of artificial intelligence for the benefit of humanity