AI in 2025 Talks
The Integrated AI Network presents its very last event before 2024 draws to a close--AI in 2025!
With a range of speakers, including a guest to ANU, we would like to invite you to take part in this series of talk. Our presenters are:
Lee Andrew Bygrave, “Law and AI: The Pacing Problem(s) as Exemplified by the EU’s AI Act”
Jenna Imad Harb, “AI for Good: Complexities of Governing Humanitarian AI and Trends for 2025”
Sergio Rodriguez Mendez, “Towards Automated Knowledge Graph Construction Pipeline – KGCP, DDM, ASKG, KGQP, KG-LLM”
Faranak Hardcastle, “Matters of Transparency in AI – From Past Futures to Future Futures"
If you have any questions, please contact Teah Abdullah at teah.abdullah@anu.edu.au
About the speakers
Lee A. Bygrave is a full professor at the Norwegian Research Center for Computers and Law (NRCCL), attached to the Department of Private Law, University of Oslo. For the past three decades, Lee has been engaged in researching and developing regulatory policy for information and communications technology. He has functioned as expert advisor on technology regulation for numerous organisations, including the European Commission, Nordic Council of Ministers, Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, and Norwegian government.
Jenna Imad Harb is a Research Fellow based at RegNet, the School of Regulation and Global Governance at the Australian National University (ANU). Her research examines how inequality, regulation, transnational governance, and digital technologies interface in the delivery of crisis relief. She has published on issues of anti-violence technologies, policing technologies, data protection, digital platforms, the regulation and social implications of AI, and the financialization of welfare.
Dr. Sergio José Rodríguez Méndez is an expert with vast experience as a Full-Stack System Developer, Data Specialist, Project Manager, and I.T. Consultant using various platforms and tools. Currently, he is working as a Research Fellow in Knowledge Graph Engineering at the ANU School of Computing.
Faranak Hardcastle: Faranak is a research fellow in the UNESCO Chair in Science Communication for the Public Good research group at the Australian National Centre for the Public Awareness of Science at the ANU. She is interested in sociotechnical research exploring how technologies and societies shape each other and evolve together, and how we can intervene in this evolution to direct it towards a point where their benefits are equally distributed.