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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

Information Technology and Innovation Foundation

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Daniel Castro
Daniel Castro

President

Information Technology and Innovation Foundation

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Ash Johnson
Ash Johnson

Senior Policy Manager

Information Technology and Innovation Foundation

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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

June 16, 2026|Events

How to Protect Kids From Chatbots Without Bans

Join ITIF for a discussion on recently introduced chatbot safety bills up for debate in Congress, including the GUARD Act and CHATBOT Act, and what policymakers, parents, and platforms could do to protect children without bans.

June 9, 2026|Events

Canada's Cloud Sovereignty: Where Should the Lines Fall?

Please join ITIF's Centre for Canadian Innovation and Competitiveness for a virtual panel examining how Canada should think about sovereignty in cloud and compute, what current proposals get right and wrong, and what a more disciplined approach to digital dependence would look like.

May 22, 2026|Testimonies & Filings

Comments to the UK’s Department for Science, Innovation, & Technology Regarding Growing Up in the Online World

The UK should resist the urge to regulate in haste. Protecting children online is essential, but protection should mean smarter design, stronger safety tools, and greater parental control, not blanket bans that remove technology from young people and choice from families.

May 15, 2026|Blogs

State Privacy Laws Show the SECURE Data Act’s Merits and Political Appeal

Critics say the SECURE Data Act is a unified Republican effort. Yet its core provisions mirror privacy protections passed by Democratic and Republican majorities in 21 states. So, while it would preempt state laws, it also draws heavily from those laws, reflecting a bipartisan, multistate consensus on how to protect consumers while enabling innovation.

May 8, 2026|Blogs

State Laws Are Creating a Fragmented Digital Market for Americans

A New Mexico ruling against Meta highlights how the growing patchwork of state digital regulations could fragment the U.S. internet by forcing companies to restrict or withdraw online services in certain states, underscoring the need for Congress to establish a unified federal digital policy framework.

May 1, 2026|Blogs

E-Commerce Is Fighting Retail Crime—Governments Should Do More

Organized retail crime is increasingly exploiting e-commerce platforms, and while companies like Amazon and eBay are investing in detection and transparency, governments must strengthen law enforcement and coordination to effectively combat these organized criminal networks.

April 29, 2026|Blogs

States Are Targeting the Wrong Problem in Grocery Pricing

Lawmakers risk misregulating grocery prices by targeting dynamic and algorithmic pricing tools, and should instead focus on enforcing existing laws against clearly defined deceptive practices.

April 27, 2026|Reports & Briefings

From Sovereignty to Control: A Clear-Eyed View of Canadian Cloud Policy

Canada’s cloud debate is asking the wrong question—control, not domestic ownership or server location, is what determines security and resilience in practice.

April 24, 2026|Testimonies & Filings

Comments to UK CMA Regarding Recent Developments in Relation to Apple’s and Google’s App Store Rules

To the extent intervention is deemed necessary, ITIF respectfully urges the Competition and Markets Authority to avoid following the EU DMA’s path of heavy-handed regulation when it comes to potential steering measures in the app store space and instead look to other jurisdictions, like Japan, that have taken a more tailored and flexible approach.

April 10, 2026|Blogs

CPSC Is Tough on Chinese Factories, but Should Get Tough on Chinese Platforms Too

The Consumer Product Safety Commission should shift more enforcement focus toward Chinese e-commerce platforms—like Temu and SHEIN—because, despite widespread safety violations linked to Chinese-made goods, these high-scale marketplaces face disproportionately little scrutiny despite posing significant risks to U.S. consumers.

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