A new reminder from the privacy debate: connectivity does more than connect people - it can also expand surveillance, strengthen profiling, and widen the gap between those who understand the system and those who are tracked by it.
An AI-focused curriculum is only as strong as the subjects that teach students how to read, judge, and question what technology produces.
Social feeds, dating apps, and messaging do not create betrayal on their own, but they can intensify idealization, secrecy, and the fragile balance of modern relationships.
ChatGPT is forcing schools to rethink the Italian-language essay, because a polished paragraph is no longer a reliable sign of independent work.
Despite reports of progress, Italy’s digital skills revolution is still more promise than reality.
As artificial intelligence becomes an everyday tool, educators warn: using AI without critical engagement risks a dangerous shortcut for the mind.
As companies rush to adopt artificial intelligence, the real competitive edge lies not in buying software, but in empowering people to use it wisely.
As Italian companies race to adopt artificial intelligence, a critical training gap could leave businesses-and data-vulnerable.
Italy’s sweeping high school reforms embrace artificial intelligence-but experts warn of critical gaps and unresolved risks.
When digital literacy standards go local, the impact on Italy’s cyber future could be seismic.
As artificial intelligence reshapes society, schools worldwide are racing to teach the life skills machines can’t replicate.
As digital abuse escalates, a new alliance between law enforcement, Silicon Valley, and civil society seeks to break the cycle of online gender-based violence.
As Italy invests heavily in AI training for educators, the race is on to ensure teachers stay ahead of the technology curve.
A landmark Italian court case exposes the hidden dangers of unchecked AI in the legal world.
From Pisa to Rome, AI is no longer just a buzzword-it's reshaping how, what, and why Italian students learn.
Digital outrage and the expectation of zero cost are turning educators and creators into suspects - and threatening the future of online information.
While Europe and the US race to upskill their workforces in AI, Italy risks falling dangerously behind.
Behind the flood of devices and platforms in schools, a deeper question looms: are students actually gaining the digital skills they need, or is it all just for show?
As schools claim to ban AI, the technology is already running the classroom from behind the scenes.
Despite bold targets for nationwide high-speed internet by 2030, Italy’s digital future is still threatened by persistent technical and bureaucratic hurdles.