Data & Technology Politics

New digital technologies enable creativity, connect the world, and provide public goods and essential services. They also challenge conventional notions of privacy, facilitate crime, and enable surveillance and oppression. How and to which end these data-driven technologies are used is determined by political, corporate, societal, and individual choices. With two billion new – mostly non-Western – users expected to go online in the coming years, the political and economic stakes are rising. Contests over global rules for technologies and data transfer will only continue to heat up. We aim to contribute toward sound political, corporate, and societal choices through research, policy advice, and the fostering of strategic communities.

Project

Neurotechnology: Considerations for Foreign and Security Policy

This project analyzes the rapidly developing field of neurotechnology from the perspectives of foreign and security policy. How might Germany take on a strategic position in the global neurotechnology ecosystem?

Study

Mitigating Disinformation in Europe

What is the state of disinformation – and efforts to counter it – on the continent? How are civil society and private actors faring in their part of the fight against disinformation? And how can policymakers better support them?

Project

Critical and Emerging Technologies: Sharpening the Strategic Agenda in Germany and Europe

Cutting-edge technologies are central to security, power and prosperity in a fast-changing global order. This project seeks to advance the debate on strategic goals, policy options, and trade-offs in Germany and Europe and to strengthen dialogue with the United States.

Project

Maritime Infrastructure Protection: Agenda for a Secure and Resilient Undersea Cable Network

To advise German policymakers on how to safeguard fiber-optic cable systems, GPPi is mapping the security strategies emerging at the national, regional and global levels.

Experts

Thorsten Benner

Director

Wade Hoxtell

Head of Operations

Alexander Pirang

Non-Resident Fellow

Jakob Hensing

Research Fellow

Florian Klumpp

Research Associate

Isabel Skierka

Non-Resident Fellow

Funding and Contact

Our Transatlantic Digital Debates dialogue program, conducted together with New America’s Open Technology Institute, is generously supported by the Transatlantic Program of the German Federal Government, with funding from the European Recovery Program (ERP) of the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy. Additional support is provided by Microsoft.


For more information, please contact Wade Hoxtell.

Transatlantic Digital Debates 2022

Digitalization is radically transforming our societies, creating new opportunities as well as regulatory challenges. There is a need to work toward a better understanding of these developments and define new global rules and standards that enable us to jointly shape our digital futures. 


The Transatlantic Digital Debates (TDD) are a joint initiative of GPPi and New America’s Open Technology Institute. It brings together 18 German and American young professionals to work on challenges at the intersection of tech and policy. Over the course of 2022, participants will meet for two week-long sessions to engage in problem-oriented dialogue on key issues related to online platform regulation, data governance and more.

Learn more