At Summit for Democracy, US targets tech tools used by repressive governments

The United States wrapped up its second Summit for Democracy on Thursday by hosting a session on "advancing democracy through technology" - a key theme at an event broadly aimed at countering authoritarianism and promoting human rights.

The two-day summit yielded about a dozen new or expanded commitments from Washington that were focused on fighting the digital tactics that autocratic governments use as tools of repression at home and abroad.

"We are pushing back vigorously on authoritarian governments' increasing use of technology to abuse human rights and undermine democracy," US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said on Thursday.

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Blinken spoke at a five-hour hybrid session on combating the misuse of technologies and shaping emerging tech - one of five regional events held by each of the summit hosts - which saw the participation of civil society, the US Congress and private sector leaders like the CEOs of YouTube and artificial intelligence start-up Anthropic.

YouTube CEO Neal Mohan takes part in a session on "Countering the Misuse of Technology and the Rise of Digital Authoritarianism" on Thursday. Photo: AFP alt=YouTube CEO Neal Mohan takes part in a session on "Countering the Misuse of Technology and the Rise of Digital Authoritarianism" on Thursday. Photo: AFP>

The summit was part of a commitment US President Joe Biden made during the 2020 campaign to champion democracy at home and around the world. It also was part of his administration's efforts to change the environment in which countries like China operate instead of confronting them directly.

Though the US insisted that the 115 invitations to the event were not meant "to define which countries are and aren't democracies," Beijing has condemned the exercise as a Cold War tactic that undermines global security by sowing division between categorised countries.

To support Biden's view that the summits contribute to "turning the tide" towards greater freedom and democracy, the administration on Wednesday pledged an additional US$690 million for the Presidential Initiative for Democratic Renewal, which was first announced at the previous summit in December 2021.

The initiative has five pillars: bolstering independent media, combating corruption, advancing technology for democracy, supporting democratic reformers and defending free and fair elections.