Director of the European Council on Foreign Relations office in Madrid, José Ignacio Torreblanca, analyzes the situation. “And through inertia, it’s become a regulatory superpower.” But some moves on the board are taken with the aim of achieving a balance between that humanist leaning, and the economic competitive-ness needed to achieve it. For example, the Digital Services Act sets clear regulations for businesses wishing to access the single market, demand-ing greater responsibility from the large digital platforms, whilst moni-toring to ensure algorithms do not hide any discriminatory bias. The famous 750,000 million euros from the Recovery and Resilience Facility extends boundaries so that each nation can set aside at least 20% for digital initiatives. “Germany wants to spend more than half of its funds on digitalization, while France, Italy and Spain want to spend a fourth or less,” estimates Sylvie Sejournet, Director of the Pictet Digital fund for strengthening European presence in value chains, including AI, as the mother of all technologies. It’s a drive for reaffirmation, of self-love THE GREAT CHANGE WILL TAKE PLACE IN THE MIND FIRST, AND IN THE FUTURE IN SCHOOLS THE ROLE PLAYED BY ACCIONA IN DIGITAL HUMANISM