Europe seeks to regulate AI while Silicon Valley and China lead innovation

Articles3 June 2026
AI is driving a new model in which regulation, data, and power shape the future of technology.

Artificial intelligence is advancing at a dizzying pace and has shifted the focus of the debate from its capabilities to a key question: who controls its development and under what conditions. While the United States and China lead the technological race based on very different models, Europe is consolidating a regulatory-based approach, positioning itself as a benchmark in defining standards for the responsible use of AI.


In this context, the event “Who controls intelligence: regulation, data, and technological power” brought together experts from the legal and technological fields to analyze the necessary balance between innovation, oversight, and the management of technological power. Throughout the debate, it became clear that artificial intelligence opens unprecedented opportunities, especially regarding access to services, efficiency, and decision-making, but also poses significant challenges concerning data control, the concentration of capabilities in large platforms, and the speed of adoption against regulatory capacity.


One of the central themes was precisely the distribution of power within the artificial intelligence ecosystem. In this regard, Rocío Catalá, Director of Legal Operations at ECIJA, highlighted that control does not rest with a single actor, but is distributed among tech companies, regulators, and users. This reality necessitates the creation of a shared governance model that balances the capacity for innovation with effective oversight and accountability mechanisms.


The impact of AI on the legal sector was another key point. The growing adoption of technological tools is transforming legal practice, facilitating access to information and automating certain processes, but also redefining the role of the lawyer. In this context, the need for the sector to adapt was emphasized, incorporating these technologies without losing sight of legal judgment, client trust, and the added value of specialized advice.


The debate also highlighted the role of European regulation as a differentiating factor. The European Union has been a pioneer in developing a specific regulatory framework for artificial intelligence, aiming to ensure its ethical, safe, and transparent use. However, it became clear that the main challenge is finding a balance that protects citizens and organizations without stifling competitiveness and innovation in a highly dynamic global environment.


Another key aspect was the debate about citizens' real access to technology and their decision-making power. Despite the advances made, it was noted that much of the power remains concentrated in major technological hubs, raising questions about digital sovereignty, transparency in data use, and users’ ability to influence technological development.


In general, the meeting reached a clear conclusion: artificial intelligence is not only transforming economic sectors but also power dynamics, regulation, and decision-making. The challenge lies in developing a model in which companies, institutions, and society advance in a coordinated manner, ensuring technological development that is competitive but also responsible and sustainable in the long term.


Read the full article published in The Objective here.

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