DILS - "AI's Impact on Society and Democracy" Yuval Goldfus and Margarita Amaxapolou
- https://www.rewi.hu-berlin.de/de/ip/els_old/akt/veranstaltungen/dils-11
- DILS - "AI's Impact on Society and Democracy" Yuval Goldfus and Margarita Amaxapolou
- 2021-05-12T12:00:00+02:00
- 2021-05-12T13:00:00+02:00
- Wann 12.05.2021 von 12:00 bis 13:00
- Wo Zoom
- Teilnehmer Yuval Goldfus Margarita Amaxapolou
- iCal
Law in the Algorithmic Society:
AI's Impact on Society and Democracy
In this Digital Ideas Lunch Series, we invite young scholars from around the world to share what they believe the most pressing issues are, how they identify problems, and what solutions they suggest as we move into the new era. We invite master and PhD students to get to know emerging research fields, to comment and to connect with world-leading institutions. In three of the sessions, more senior researchers provide context and share recent research on the impact of algorithms.
Each session begins with a presentation by the speakers, is followed by a comment of one of the students and a discussion. After the session, there is opportunity for networking.
How AI Creates a Deterministic World
A presentation by Yuval Goldfus, PhD Candidate at Univ. of Jerusalem.
Epistemic Bias in Law and AI Research and the Future of Democratic Law-Making
A presentation by Margarita Amaxapolou, PhD Candidate at King’s College London.
This event will take place online on Zoom.
Join us at: https://hu-berlin.zoom.us/j/9916221271 - Zoom Meeting-ID: 991 622 1271 Please use your real and full name when joining us on Zoom.
You will find more informations on and the full program of the Digital Ideas Lunch Series here: www.european-law-school.eu/en/network-events/dils.
The Digital Ideas Lunch Series is hosted by the European Law School at Humboldt University, Prof. Dr. Dr. Stefan Grundmann, in cooperation with King's College London’s Centre for Technology, Ethics, Law and Society and digital partner Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society for the Global Network of Internet and Society Research Centers.