Episodios
-
MSTL speaks to Susan Benesch, director and founder of the Dangerous Speech Project, and Faculty Associate of Harvard's Berkman Klein Center, about the Facebook Oversight Board's decision to uphold the ban on Donald Trump's Facebook account, and the role of international human rights law in providing oversight for social media content.
-
'What is being traded is not the artwork, it's the participation.'
CFO and Co-Founder of Capexmove, Eti Cüneyt, discusses what NFTs are, why the NBA is using them, and how the world may respond to the continuing expansion of the cryptosphere.
-
¿Faltan episodios?
-
What duties does the internet owe you? A discussion with Lorna Woods, Professor of Internet Law at the University of Essex, on establishing a statutory duty of care owed by internet platforms to users of their services.
-
How are HighQ and Bryter are being used to assist Refugees in Greece?
Phil Worthington, Managing Director of European Lawyers in Lesvos (ELIL), explains how these platforms are being used to increase access to justice for the thousands of refugees and asylum-seekers on the Greek islands of Lesvos and Samos.
-
AI's potential vs legal uncertainty. Who wins?
Head of AI at Gowling WLG and co-editor of ‘The Law of Artificial Intelligence’ gives us an insight.
Full conversation out now.
-
Understanding and assisting the use of digital evidence to increase accountability for atrocity crimes and human rights abuses.
This goal and more is shared by Bethany Houghton, assistant counsel at Public International Law and Policy Group.
-
Matt Hervey--Head of AI at Gowling WLG and co-editor of 'The Law of Artificial Intelligence'--talks about the law's protection against bias in AI, distrust in AI, future of AI law, and more.
-
CEO of tech start-up SayMine, Gal Ringel, talks about how notions of data ownership have changed in the GDPR era, and the role of the private sector in making these rights accessible to the general public.
-
Jacob Turner of Fountain Court Chambers sheds light on the issues surrounding the use of predictive policing, explainability of AI decision making, potential legal or non-legal solutions, and whether AI ought to be bestowed with legal personhood.
Timestamps:
0:07 Introducing Jacob Turner and overview of current use of predictive policing
05:36 Is there negative stigmatisation of such AI technologies?
07:48 Is increasing complexity of AI an issue?
10:23 How should AI be regulated? Hard/soft laws, sector-specific solutions, public/private use distinction, balance struck in UK and EU, alternatives to legislation)
24:15 Legal personhood of AI discussed within 'Robot Rules'
29:25 Would AI liability serve justice for possible victims of discriminatory facial recognition? Accountability and notions of justice
35:24 Public outrage's impact on AI use
37:14 Roundup of topics discussed and Jacob's Solicitor Advocate journey
42:07: Switch to Bar and differences in skills used
-
Anna Hoffman, a barrister at 4 Pump Court Chambers in London, gives us an insight into UK’s developing tracing apps and the extent to which those may impede on our basic rights to privacy. The UK’s handling of the pandemic may serve as a microcosm of future issues facing the regulation of technology such as the growth of colossal tech companies, showing increasing divergence in attitudes to privacy between the West and Asia.