Global technology: ethics and regulation as a priority

Published on June 01, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

The unstoppable advance of artificial intelligence and automation demands an international regulatory framework. Without clear rules, data protection, privacy, and human rights take a back seat. Forums such as the G20 or the UN have the opportunity to establish binding ethical principles that prioritize people over corporate interests.

global governance framework regulating artificial intelligence, multiple robotic arms and server racks in a futuristic data center, a glowing digital gavel striking a holographic law book, AI neural network nodes being restrained by transparent ethical guidelines, United Nations assembly hall in background with delegates observing, cinematic photorealistic engineering visualization, cool blue and white lighting, metallic surfaces reflecting data streams, symbolic chains of binary code binding autonomous systems, dramatic contrast between human oversight and machine automation, ultra-detailed circuitry and legal document textures

Technical development under democratic control 🤖

The implementation of technical standards such as algorithm auditing, transparency in model training, and traceability of automated decisions are necessary steps. Countries like the European Union are already advancing with the AI Act, but global legal fragmentation creates gaps. International regulation should not be limited to recommendations; it requires verification mechanisms, sanctions, and emergency protocols for systemic failures.

The ethics manual no one read in the boardroom 🍕

Sure, because nothing says responsible future like a company that promises ethics on its website while programming an assistant that recommends pizza at 3 a.m. because it detected your anxiety. International regulation is urgent, lest the next great technological breakthrough be a microwave that charges you for opening the door without permission. At least let bureaucracy save us from ourselves.