Doha: Director General of Al Jazeera Media Network Sheikh Nasser bin Faisal Al-Thani affirmed that Doha has, in recent years, transformed into a global arena for dialogue, a bridge between regions of the world, and a meeting point for ideas seeking a more balanced future between technology, knowledge, and humanity.
According to Qatar News Agency, as part of a session titled The Future of Journalism and Technology held as part of the third edition of Web Summit Qatar 2026, he said that Al Jazeera has embarked on a comprehensive process of rethinking the role, responsibility, and function of news media in the digital age. He noted that at a time when technology was no longer a separate sector but a central force reshaping politics, economics, culture, and how humans understand themselves and the world around them, the world no longer suffers from a scarcity of knowledge but rather from an overabundance of it. He also noted that the challenge no longer becomes about access to information or the speed at which it circulates, but the ability to understand it and place it within its proper context.
He pointed out that the fundamental question was no longer what is known, but rather how to understand it and what to do with that understanding. He stressed that the transformations taking place in the media cannot be separated from the profound changes brought about by digital technology in the structure of the public sphere.
He emphasized that technology has helped break the monopoly over information, provided platforms for those who previously had no voice, and empowered individuals and communities that had not secured a seat among the powerful to tell their stories, expose injustice, and address the world directly without intermediaries, describing this as a historic achievement that cannot be denied.
He warned that technology has also contributed to the emergence of troubling phenomena that cannot be ignored. He highlighted that algorithms, the attention economy, and the logic of instant interaction have fueled new forms of populism, deepened polarization instead of dialogue, and created cognitive bubbles in which individuals live isolated from other narratives and from the complexity of reality itself.
He said that in certain contexts, hate speech, the justification of violence, and incitement have found fertile ground for spread, not always due to malicious intent, but because of digital and technological systems that reward shock, exaggeration, amplify anger, and reduce complex issues to stark binaries. He said that what the world faces today is not a conflict between journalism and technology, nor a contradiction between speed and meaning, but rather a historic opportunity to rebuild the relationship between them on the basis of shared responsibility, in order to establish a resilient journalism capable of keeping pace with the moment without losing depth, and of using the tools of the age without abandoning its values.
He concluded his remarks by affirming that when responsible journalism meets ethically committed technology, the result was not merely better content, but a world more capable of dialogue and resolving conflicts through knowledge rather than incitement.