AI

APC at CSW68: Questioning power structures and advocating for women’s rights
APC at CSW68: Questioning power structures and advocating for women’s rights 01 May 2024 Karla Velasco Ramos

Our Women's Rights Programme's policy advocacy coordinator presents highlights of APC's multi-faceted participation and advocacy at the UN’s Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) event this year, centred on promoting and sharing our work on human rights, specifically the rights of women and people of diverse genders and sexualities.

Joint statement: Finding the good in the first UN General Assembly resolution on artificial intelligence
Joint statement: Finding the good in the first UN General Assembly resolution on artificial intelligence 10 April 2024 Various

Stakeholders far from UN grounds benefit when states clarify their position on new and emerging technologies and how international law, including international human rights law, and sustainable development commitments apply to fields like artificial intelligence.

Oxford reflections: Charting a course through digital surveillance, AI's double-edged sword and global cyber politics
Oxford reflections: Charting a course through digital surveillance, AI's double-edged sword and global cyber politics 28 March 2024 Gilbert Beyamba

The writer presents some key takeaways from the 2023 Comparative Media Law and Policy (PCMLP) programme at University of Oxford, which he attended with the help of an APC grant. 

The risks of artificial intelligence and the response of Korean civil society
The risks of artificial intelligence and the response of Korean civil society 05 March 2024 Byoung-il Oh

As South Koreans embrace artificial intelligence in daily life, the country is becoming a test case of the “allow first, regulate later” approach to AI regulation. This piece outlines some of the controversial AI-related cases and the need to publicise the dangers of unchecked AI.

Inside the Digital Society: Notes on a Scandal
Inside the Digital Society: Notes on a Scandal 15 February 2024 David Souter

The British Post Office scandal was a failure of both technology and human systems. The software didn’t work, but too many people thought that whatever the computer said had to be right. This has several lessons for us about trust in computer and AI systems as well as the need for strong institutions and media.

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