Reading Materials (CLE Written Materials, April 24, 2023)
GPT, GDPR, AI ACT: HOW (NOT) TO REGULATE “GENERATIVE AI”?
Panel 1: How should lawyers think about generative AI? (13:00-14:00)
Catherine Sharkey, AI for Retrospective Review, Belmont Law Review (2021)
Philipp Hacker, Andreas Engel, and Marco Mauer, Regulating ChatGPT and other Large Generative AI Models (April 5, 2023)
Avi Gesser, Suchita Mandavilli Brundage, Samuel J. Allaman, Melissa Muse, and Lex Gaillard, The Value of Having AI Governance – Lessons from ChatGPT (April 10, 2023)
Panel 2: Is generative AI compatible with data privacy laws? (14:15-15:15)
Italian Data Protection Authority decisions & news on Open AI
Selected provisions of the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation
Panel 3: How to allocate risk, rights, and responsibilities along the generative AI supply chain? (15:30-16:30)
Avi Gesser, Jehan A. Patterson, Tricia Bozyk Sherno, Frank Colleluori, and Anna R. Gressel, Regulators Should Treat AI Like Employees to Avoid Stifling Innovation (Nov 30, 2022)
Margot Kaminski, The Developing Law of AI Regulation: A Turn to Risk Regulation, Lawfare (April 20, 2023)
Panel 4: Will generative AI entrench infrastructural power and impair competition? (16:45-17:45)
AI Now Landscape Report, “Confronting Tech Power” (2023)
Angelina Fisher and Thomas Streinz, Confronting Data Inequality, 60 Columbia Journal of Transnational Law 829 (2022)
Tejas N. Narechania, Machine Learning as Natural Monopoly, 107 Iowa Law Review 1543 (2022)
Keynote: The EU’s Digital Decade (18:00-19:00)
Panel 5: How to coordinate generative AI regulation transnationally? (19:15-20:00)
Council of Europe, Committee on Artificial Intelligence (CAI), Revised Zero Draft [Framework] Convention on Artificial Intelligence, Human Rights, Democracy and the Rule of Law
PRC Measures for the Management of Generative AI (Draft for Comment 2023)