Categories: Audio, Recorded Interviews, Video. Watch the Video or Listen to the Audio on. Berkman Klein Center SeptemFeaturing Bruce Schneier, the author of Click Here to Kill Everybody in conversation with Abby Everett Jaques, MIT. Workshop on AI and Ethics, Presenter, co-hosted by the Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University, the Center for Information Technology Policy at Princeton University, and MIT. 'Click Here to Kill Everybody': A Berkman Klein Center Book Talk. “IEEE Global Initiative Law Committee Draft Principles for the Beneficial Adoption of A/IS in Legal Systems”, The First Summit on Digital Economy and the Future Rule of Law. Global Governance of AI Roundtable, World Government Summit, Speaker, Law Committee Chair, Dubai, UAE, February 10, 2019.Īrtificial Intelligence in a Democratic Society, Moderator and Presenter, New York University Law School, New York, November 30-December 1, 2018. from the Wharton School of Business, and chose to forgo completion of his M.P.A at Harvard’s Kennedy School in order to co-found H5.
Trained in political science at the Graduate Institute of International Studies of the University of Geneva (Switzerland), he earned his M.B.A. Nicolas was a member of the Law and Judiciary policy committee for Barack Obama’s first presidential campaign. Nicolas has been featured in Forbes magazine, and has spoken on issues pertaining to artificial intelligence and its governance at a wide variety of conferences and organizations, including the Spring Meetings of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), UN University, the World Web Forum, Harvard and Stanford Law Schools, and Renmin University of China. He leads The Future Society’s Law and Society Initiative and is also a member of the Council on Extended Intelligence (CXI), a joint initiative of the MIT Media Lab and IEEE-SA.
He chairs the Law Committees of the IEEE Global Initiative on Ethics of Autonomous and Intelligent Systems and of the Global Governance of AI Roundtable hosted in Dubai as part of the annual World Government Summit. He was a pioneer in advancing the application of scientific methods, automation, and artificial intelligence in legal systems and in advocating norms for their governance.
dominance through legal rules), and the ways in which this manifests itself in developing countries in Africa.Nicolas Economou is the chief executive of H5. He was also a visiting researcher at the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies and holds a BA in. The Spring 2021 Research Sprint, hosted by the Digital Asia Hub in collaboration with the Berkman Klein Center and the Global Network of Internet & Society Centers, explores the evolving normative concept of digital self-determination as an enabler of or at least contributor to the exercise of autonomy and agency in the face of. Paul holds a Masters of International Relations from Sciences Po Paris and was a scholar of the German National Merit Foundation (Studienstiftung). This panel examines questions of unequal power in the global digital economy (through U.S corporations, China, and Brussels (i.e. He is also an Affilate of Harvard Universitys Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society. For so-called “periphery” countries such as those in sub-Saharan Africa, the information economy represents an opportunity to chase the long-elusive quest for industrialization, now dubbed “digital industrialization”, “digital development” or “data for development.” Despite the optimism represented in the digital development policy discourse, the limits and potentials of any kind of development are heavily constrained by background conditions rooted in past global power imbalances and a colonial legacy of non-contextual laws and institutions. Berkman Klein Center 10 min read A report from the Symposium on Trust and Ethics of Autonomous Vehicles (STEAV) by David Weinberger Sometimes clarity means embracing complexity. ’67 has made a generous gift of 15 million to the Berkman Center. The global information economy has provided freedom-enhancing affordances for previously marginalized groups, but has also enabled extractive practices in the form of digital imperialism, or as others term it, data colonialism. Harvard Law School and the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University are pleased to announce that Michael R.