So you want to report on the tech industry but aren't a tech reporter?

So you want to report on the tech industry but aren't a tech reporter?


Data

Ven 17 aprile 2026

Ora inizio

10:30

Ingresso

Gratuito

Distanza da te

Calcolo distanza...


The impact of technology and AI is unprecedented. Tech is one of the defining forces shaping our political, economic and social realities. From elections and labour rights to education, health, culture and migration, technology companies - and their owners - have huge power. Yet for years, reporting on the tech industry has largely been seen as the domain of highly specialised tech reporters, fluent in jargon, algorithms, product launches and engineering cultures. As a result, many newsrooms have treated Big Tech as a niche beat rather than a central subject that cuts across almost every area of journalism.
This panel starts from a different premise: almost every journalist needs to know how to interrogate the tech industry. AI is radically reshaping the world of tomorrow. Bringing together reporters from different countries and beats — none of whom would define themselves as tech specialists — the conversation will explore how journalists have investigated the digital market from political, economic, labour and human rights perspectives. Panelists will discuss how cross-border collaborations have helped them follow companies that operate globally but are regulated locally, and how non-tech reporters can overcome barriers such as access, expertise and corporate opacity.
Together, they will share practical tips, reporting strategies and lessons learned for journalists who want to hold tech companies to account, showing that you don’t need to be a tech expert to investigate some of the most powerful companies of our time.
Moderated by Peter Geoghegan.
Organised in association with Democracy for Sale.


Modificato più di un mese fa

Pagine coinvolte
Peter Geoghegan
Peter Geoghegan

Peter Geoghegan is the founder (in 2023) of the award-winning investigative news site Democracy for Sale, an investigative journalism outfit dedicated to transparency and accountability. Democracy for Sale won a 2025 British Journalism Award for its work on dark money in British politics. His journalism has appeared in the New York Times, the Guardian, the London Review of Books and many other publications. He was openDemocracy‘s UK investigations editor from 2018 to 2021 and editor-in-chief and CEO at openDemocracy from 2021 to 2023. He co-founded the Scottish investigative website the Ferret. Peter’s most recent book, the Sunday Times best-selling Democracy for Sale: Dark Money and Dirty Politics, was published in August 2020 by Head of Zeus. His previous book, The People’s Referendum: Why Scotland Will Never Be the Same Again, was nominated for the Saltire First Book Award. He has made documentaries for BBC Radio Four, worked on investigative TV programmes for Channel 4 and regularly appears on British and international broadcast outlets. He lives in London.

Daniel Howden
Daniel Howden

Daniel Howden is the founder and Managing Director of Lighthouse Reports, an award-winning European nonprofit investigative newsroom. A writer, reporter and editor his work focuses on surveillance technologies and migration. He was previously a foreign correspondent with the Economist, the Guardian and the Independent. Much of his work since 2016 has focused on migration; he was Senior Editor at Refugees Deeply and a Visiting Fellow at Oxford’s Refugee Studies Centre. He is a two-times winner of the Migration Media Award, and his long-form writing won special mention at the inaugural True Stories Award, and a finalist slot at the Online Journalism Awards.

Natalia Viana
Natalia Viana

Natalia Viana is the co-founder and executive director of Agência Pública, Latin America’s largest nonprofit newsroom. She leads long-term investigations and multimedia projects about human rights violations and her team has won 80 awards for its excellence in journalism. A 2022 Nieman Fellow at Harvard, she is the author and co-author of five books about political violence and social issues in Latin America. Her latest, O Vazamento (""The Leak"") brings a personal perspective of the WikiLeaks release of US Diplomatic Cables in 2010. Natalia is a board member of the Gabo Foundation, an organization founded by the Colombian writer Gabriel García Márquez dedicated to promoting better journalism and the stimulation of creativity, of the Center of Media Integrity of the OAS, of CLIP, the Latin American Investigative Journalism Center, and of Conectas Direitos Humanos, Brazil's largest Human Rights NGO.

Amy Westervelt
Amy Westervelt

Amy Westervelt is an award-winning investigative climate journalist who has been on the climate beat for more than 20 years, reporting for a wide range of outlets, including Inside Climate News, The Washington Post, The Guardian, The Intercept, NPR, and many more. In 2017, she started the podcast production company Critical Frequency, which launched the first "true-crime" climate podcast, Drilled, in 2018. Today, Drilled has expanded into a multimedia investigative newsroom focused on climate accountability, and Critical Frequency has produced more than two dozen narrative, reported podcasts on subjects ranging from Indigenous rights to climate litigation. In 2023, Amy was named a Covering Climate Now’s Journalist of the Year. Her work has previously received Murrow, ONA, SEJ, Rachel Carson, and Folio awards, as well as a Peabody nomination. She is based in Costa Rica.

Festival Internazionale del Giornalismo
Festival Internazionale del Giornalismo

Il Festival Internazionale del Giornalismo di Perugia è un evento annuale che riunisce professionisti dei media, esperti di comunicazione e appassionati di informazione da tutto il mondo. Si svolge nel centro storico di Perugia e offre conferenze, dibattiti, workshop e opportunità di networking sui temi più rilevanti del giornalismo contemporaneo.

Mostra tutto (7)