In 2026, artificial intelligence is advancing at an exponential pace while global regulation remains fragmented, ineffective, and years behind the technology.The UN Secretary General has called for a $3 billion global AI capacity fund. But he also openly acknowledged a fundamental problem: international institutions lack the authority to enforce meaningful regulation on transnational tech corporations.This regulatory vacuum creates real and present dangers:Mass surveillance systems deployed without public debate or legislative oversightAI-generated political propaganda capable of manipulating elections at unprecedented scaleAutonomous weapons systems developed under the guise of "defense innovation"Social credit models exported from authoritarian states to developing nationsWhat makes this particularly dangerous is the asymmetry. Tech corporations possess technical expertise that regulators cannot match. They define their own limits. They exploit regulatory gaps across jurisdictions. Meanwhile, developing countries lack the resources to assess risks or build their own safeguards.This is technological colonialism in real time.We need international standards. Algorithmic transparency. Technical assistance for vulnerable nations. And genuine public oversight before these systems become impossible to regulate.https://newsgroup.site/ai-regulation-2026-human-rights-threat/#AI #regulation #tech #humanrights #democracy