Tipped as the next iteration of the internet, the vision of the metaverse is to combine the physical and digital worlds to create a fully immersive experience where users will spend much of their lives. Use cases include everything we use the internet for today and more, with estimates for the target addressable market ranging from $1 trillion to $13 trillion: a market with far too much potential to ignore. Yet, the metaverse brings a number of inherent and novel risks to be tackled.
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Net zero tech attracted record investment in 2021 and funding was up nearly 70% in Q1 of 2022 compared to Q1 of 2021. There are strong tailwinds driving demand for net zero tech and even with significant geopolitical and macroeconomic headwinds, we expect to see significant investment in net zero tech.
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Workplace activism is not a new concept, but one which has been amplified in recent times by societal, political, and environmental movements and the circumstances of the Covid-19 pandemic. It is increasingly becoming a defining feature of the workplace – particularly for the tech sector which has been fertile ground for cases of high-profile activism over the years.
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The increasingly interventionist approach to regulating the digital economy has been building. 2022 has seen, however, a major plank of those efforts crystalise with the finalisation of platform regulation in the EU and reform on the horizon in other major jurisdictions.
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For several years, societies have debated how to regulate the online platforms that host huge volumes of content created by their users. Until now, social media platforms, search engines and messaging platforms have been regulated via an intermittent patchwork of discrete laws in various countries and a raft of self-regulatory initiatives. But, after a long incubation period, the second half of 2022 should see the finalisation of two of the most ambitious and holistic regulatory regimes for online harms: the UK’s Online Safety Bill (OSB); and the European Union’s Digital Services Act (DSA). These laws share common objectives for a mandatory content regulation framework, but have key differences in execution and scope.
Read more in our full report here.