It’s alive!! *The Privacy Fallacy: Harm and Power in the Information Economy* is out today in paperback, hardcover, & eBook https://t.co/xrXKye8qVo
After nearly 2 years of work, the UK Government’s International Data Transfers Expert Council’s report was published & presented yesterday. It’s been a fascinating journey but I feel we are at the start of the most important work. Some personal observations. 🧵
Regulating the Risks of AI describes the growing convergence around risk regulation in AI governance. It addresses the question: what does it mean to use risk regulation to govern AI systems? (the revised ~65 page version) https://t.co/5z9UIqvEDW
Great rundown on how scraping law has shifted, and just a few of the conspicuous hypocrites in these cases. (Cough cough, Meta and Microsoft)
https://t.co/AEq7JXwb06
Privacy regulators are literally declaring the anti-scraping rule that platforms like Meta want. This is a foolproof way to prevent interoperability mandates from ever working, to deter critical research from the likes of @JuliaAngwin and to entrench incumbent monopolies.
Good news! Dan’s now serves breakfast! Available only Friday, Saturday, Sunday mornings from 12:00am-2:00am and consists of your choice of liquor and mixer.
What if the government launched a consultation on developing a Canadian code of practice for generative AI and didn’t tell anyone or post the consultation document? Apparently consultation launched last week but there is no link to an actual document.
https://t.co/G9IvFLZ4ez
You may be wondering: why are some of the very people who develop and deploy artificial intelligence sounding the alarm about it's existential threat? Consider two reasons--
It feels like everyone is talking non-stop about ChatGPT and art generators and every other possible form of generative AI.
We're joining the party, but with a report on harms. Specifically, all the harms. It's...it's a long report. And good.
https://t.co/1ZJqyyyDuA
Picture this: You're trying to learn privacy, but your electricity flickers in and out, and bomb sirens blare.
In this episode of The Privacy Beat Podcast, Ukrainian law student Nazar Dudchak talks about his recent "win" in court despite the adversity.
https://t.co/BawuSeE9WD