The growing prominence of AI underscores the need for enhanced relations across various domains, icluding data privacy and international law, to effectively address AI-specific challenges. Another critical area in need of stronger regulation is cyberlaw, which encompasses e-commerce, digital privacy, and cybercrimes. While previous papers of this series have addressed e-commerce, privacy regulations and AI legislation in Türkiye, this paper focuses specifically on the cybersecurity dimension of cyberlaws. As the third instalment in a broader series on AI regulation in Türkiye, this discussion will explore how to effectively regulate the cybersecurity aspects of AI within the Turkish context.
Download the Discussion PaperAI Regulation in Türkiye: Bringing International Laws into the Discussion
Written by: Şeymanur Yönt
Şeymanur Yönt
Şeymanur Yönt is a Deputy Researcher at TRT World Research Centre. She holds a Bachelor of Laws degree from Istanbul University and a Master of Laws degree from the London School of Economics and Political Science. She has practiced as a lawyer for two years and worked as a publications and research intern at the American Society of International Law. Her research interests include public international law, international economic law, and development.
MORE FROM AUTHOR
Sovereign Data, Strategic Sectors: Why Healthcare and Automotives Are the New Frontlines
Data is a crucial asset for all: not only from a privacy perspective, but also as a source of revenue and strategic geopolitical power....
Breaking or Bending: Rethinking Sanctions, Trade, and the Future of Global Markets
Welcome to the premiere episode of the Tipping Point, a new podcast series from the TRT World Research Centre.
For decades, the global economic system...
MORE FROM CURRENT CATEGORY
A Deficit of Coherence? Türkiye and the Search for American Strategic Reason
Anation’s survival hinges on power, yet the zenith of superpower status can paradoxically erode the strategic reasoning essential to sustain it. During the Cold...
From Promises to Obligations: Reclaiming Climate Justice through the ICJ’s Advisory Opinion
Few issues in contemporary global governance reveal the fragility of international cooperation and the limits of state sovereignty as starkly as climate change. What...
Borders Under Pressure: Rethinking Migration Policies for a Changing World
At a time when 122.6 million people worldwide have been forcibly displaced—the highest number under international protection since World War II—our global migration systems...
