|
WSIS Forum 2026: From Dialogue to Delivery
The first Forum since the WSIS+20 Review carried a single, unmistakable message: the time for commitments has passed, and the decade of implementation has begun.
Across the week, a few big ideas kept surfacing. Inclusion emerged as the true measure of progress. Connectivity alone is not enough; people need affordable access, digital skills, relevant
content, and safe online spaces. Youth demanded genuine partnership rather than token seats, and speakers insisted women and girls belong in the rooms where AI and data standards are set.
Artificial intelligence dominated discussions, but with a development lens. Leaders pushed for interoperable systems rather than identical ones, warned of a widening AI divide as infrastructure
funding concentrates in a few private firms, and championed local languages, regional data, and human-centered design. The financing challenge was made concrete: a $2.66 trillion investment gap, met by early pledges including Microsoft's $50 billion for AI
in the Global South.
Above all, the Forum embraced a new metric of success: not technology deployed but lives improved.
Takeaways from the Chair's Summary
Egypt's Chair distilled the week into five priorities: digital inclusion as the central goal, AI in service of development, digital finance as a tool for opportunity, youth as partners, and
closing the gender divide. He called for better measurement of real-world impact and pointed to the WSIS Prizes, 18 winners from 1,595 submissions across 122 countries, as proof the Action Lines deliver.
Carrying WSIS through the year
The Forum's worth will be proven between now and 2027. Road maps, indicators, pledges, and toolkits must become services, skills, and jobs. WSIS stays relevant because it brings people together; it stays powerful
only if that togetherness turns into action. The year ahead is where dialogue becomes delivery.
|