As Europeans and global citizens we are seeing risks in the Digital Society increasing as we speak. For example, the European Commission has released Digital Omnibus Package, on 19 November 2025, towards simplifying the digital regulatory framework across data access, privacy and cybersecurity. This has major consequences for citizens’ rights. Framed as an improvement in European legislation to facilitate the European industry and promote European competitiveness, form the citizen’s perspective it can be seen as the EU succumbing to the pressure by the Trump administration and his Big Tech lobby. But on AI the situation is even more concerning.
As the International AI Safety Report 2026 underlines, frontier models are quickly approaching capabilities that could materially lower barriers to harmful use, including in biology, cyberattacks and large-scale manipulation.
We therefore support the researchers, experts, and civil society organizations, whose work in bringing these concerns to the attention of policymakers and governments.
“It is now time for states to act to prevent unacceptable and internationally destabilizing AI risks. A practical next step would be to harmonize the AI red lines that some governments and AI companies have already established, with the aim of reinforcing them through international agreements.”
The Global Call for AI Red Lines was launched during the UN General Assembly and picked up notable attention and momentum.