Skip to content
ITIF Logo
ITIF Search

Internet

As every sector of the global economy and nearly every facet of modern society undergo digital transformation, ITIF advocates for policies that spur not just the development of IT innovations, but more importantly their adoption and use throughout the economy. In the area of Internet policy, ITIF's work covers issues related to taxation, e-commerce, digital copyright, global Internet governance, and digital currencies.

Alex Ambrose
Alex Ambrose

Policy Analyst

Read Bio
Daniel Castro
Daniel Castro

Vice President and Director, Center for Data Innovation

Information Technology and Innovation Foundation

Read Bio
Eli Clemens
Eli Clemens

Senior Policy Analyst

Center for Data Innovation

Read Bio
Ash Johnson
Ash Johnson

Senior Policy Manager

Information Technology and Innovation Foundation

Read Bio

Featured

How Congress Can Foster a Digital Single Market in America

How Congress Can Foster a Digital Single Market in America

In areas ranging from data privacy to content moderation, states are creating patchworks of regulation that confuse consumers, complicate compliance, and undermine the digital economy. It’s time for Congress to step in and establish a consistent national approach to digital policy.

How to Address Political Speech on Social Media in the United States

How to Address Political Speech on Social Media in the United States

Policymakers could improve content moderation on social media by building international consensus on content moderation guidelines, providing more resources to address state-sponsored disinformation, and increasing transparency in content moderation decisions.

Section 230 Series: The Law’s History, Its Impact, Its Problems (Real and Imagined), and the Path Forward for Reform

Section 230 Series: The Law’s History, Its Impact, Its Problems (Real and Imagined), and the Path Forward for Reform

In a comprehensive analysis, ITIF concludes any reform to Section 230 should preserve the fundamental principle that liability for content should reside with the content creator while also ensuring online platforms are held responsible for their own conduct.

More Publications and Events

March 2, 2026|Events

Tech Policy 202: Spring 2026 Educational Seminar Series for Congressional and Federal Staff

ITIF’s spring seminar course explores core emerging technologies and issues that are reshaping our world and, in the process, creating public policy challenges and opportunities. The course is open to congressional and federal staff only.

January 27, 2026|Blogs

Section 230 Should Not Be a Political Weapon

Sen. Rand Paul’s call to revoke Section 230 over grievances with Big Tech highlights a broader risk: using the law as a political weapon would undermine online free speech, whereas reforms increasing transparency in content moderation could address concerns without dismantling its protections.

January 26, 2026|Reports & Briefings

How the Brussels Effect Hinders Innovation in the Global South

Mandatory adoption of EU-style digital rules amounts to regulatory imperialism for many countries in the Global South. It limits technology adoption, raises compliance costs, and undermines the ability of local firms to compete with Western ones.

January 26, 2026|Commentary

Five Takeaways from the TikTok Deal

The TikTok deal shows that targeted structural safeguards can address data security risks without banning foreign apps outright. It also highlights unresolved challenges around reciprocity, uneven enforcement, and how governments should handle other Chinese tech platforms going forward.

January 23, 2026|Commentary

Protecting Children Online in the UK Requires Smarter Tools, Not Blanket Bans

The UK’s proposed under-16 social media ban reflects a recurring moral panic about new technologies and would undermine youth connection, parental choice, and online privacy without evidence that blanket bans address the real causes of harms to children.

January 8, 2026|Blogs

Ten Ways Policymakers Should Respond to the Grok Bikini Fiasco

The Grok bikini controversy highlights real harms from AI misuse, but it also shows that the right response is enforcing existing laws, holding bad actors accountable, and pursuing tech-neutral, proportionate policies—rather than rushing into broad, AI-specific regulation that risks undermining free expression and innovation.

January 5, 2026|Blogs

How Yesterday’s Web-Crawling Policies Will Shape Tomorrow’s AI Leadership

The Internet may be forever, but regulatory frameworks should not be. Decisions made today about web crawling will help determine where the next generation of AI leadership emerges—whether in Europe, the United States, or elsewhere.

December 28, 2025|Op-Eds & Contributed Articles

How Digital Services Actually Help Korea’s Small Businesses

Cloud computing, artificial intelligence (AI)-based tools, digital advertising, e-commerce platforms and online human resources systems have become the most practical way smaller firms close the capability gap with larger competitors.

December 17, 2025|Testimonies & Filings

Comments to FCC Regarding Transition of Communications Networks in the US to All IP Technology

Now is the time for the Commission to remove unnecessary regulations that stand in the way of next-generation network deployment.

December 16, 2025|Blogs

Europe’s ePrivacy Reforms Are Too Late—and Too Small

The European Commission’s proposed tweaks to the ePrivacy Directive offer only minor relief from intrusive cookie prompts, but to truly support innovation, free digital services, and Europe’s competitiveness, policymakers must fundamentally overhaul the outdated consent model.

Back to Top