Frontier AI Regulation: from Trustworthiness to Sustainability
Wann: Di, 09.07.2024, 18:15 Uhr bis 19:45 Uhr
Wo: Universität Hamburg , Edmund-Siemers-Allee 1, Flügel West, 20146 Hamburg, Raum 221
This event takes place in English.
Prof. Dr. Philipp Hacker, European University Viadrina, Frankfurt (Oder), D
Öffentliche Vorlesung im Rahmen des Allgemeinen Vorlesungswesens
Taming the Machines — Horizons of Artificial Intelligence
The Ethics in Information Technology Public Lecture Series
This summer‘s „Taming the Machine“ lecture series sheds light on the ethical, political, legal, and societal dimensions of Artificial Intelligence (AI).
With AI technologies applied in markets, industry, law enforcement, but also office spaces, classrooms, and homes, it has become undoubtable that AI successfully seeped into the centres of our lifeworld. Amidst this sprawling digitisation, we might want to hit the pause button and take stock: to reflect on future AI, and accordingly upon how the foundations of human life – in all of its stages and all of its contexts – are in the process of being dramatically altered.
Despite an observable trend of AI further entrenching past injustices, endangering civil and human rights, and aggravating environmental and ecological challenges, the course of events also entails huge potentials. It might appear as a rare stroke of fortune that we are aware of the unfolding of a paradigm shift around us, leaving us with the possibility for steering our digital society in the direction of a better world.
Hence, this lecture series brings together perspectives from ethics, politics, law, geography, and media studies to assess the potential for preserving and developing human values in the design, dissemination, and application of AI technologies. How does AI challenge our most fundamental social, political, and economic institutions? How can we bolster (or even improve) them in times of technological disruption? What regulations are needed to render AI environments fairer and more transparent? What needs to be done to make them more sustainable? In what sense could (and even should) we hold AI accountable?
To explore these and other related questions, this public lecture series invites distinguished international researchers to present and discuss their work. To get the latest updates and details how to attend the lectures, please visit http://uhh.de/inf-eit.
Tuesday 18:15 – 19:45 (CET), Main Building, Edmund-Siemers-Allee 1, West Wing, Room 221
Koordination:
Prof. Dr. Judith Simon, Professor for Ethics in Information Technology, Universität Hamburg