Conference on “Artificial Intelligence and the Law: New Challenges and Possibilities for Fundamental Human Rights and Security”
Due to the labour disruption at York University this conference will now be ONLINE ONLY. Sorry for the inconvenience
The Jack and Mae Nathanson Centre on Transnational Human Rights, Crime, and Security will hold a conference titled “Artificial Intelligence and the Law: New Challenges and Possibilities for Fundamental Human Rights and Security”, on March 13, 2024, ONLINE.
Artificial Intelligence (AI) is dramatically reshaping how people live, work, and interact, as well as the functioning of societies and legal systems’ adaptations to these changes. Machine learning technologies’ integration into various decision-making processes carries profound implications for sentencing, taxation, workplace dynamics, surveillance and policing, privacy, and financial markets. The rising automation of human activities prompts significant legal inquiries spanning constitutional, contractual, and tort issues.
Large Language Models (LLMs) such as Chat GPT are AI technologies with a range of legal, ethical, and societal implications. These models, trained on massive volumes of text data, can generate text resembling human language, enabling tasks like answering questions, writing essays, even crafting poetry. They implicate freedom of expression, the right to information, and the democratic process at large. They have the potential to generate misleading, harmful, or hateful content, regardless of their programmers’ and owners’ intentions. They could become tools for propaganda or disinformation campaigns. They raise intellectual property questions, particularly when their output is based on pre-existing intellectual or artistic works and could lead to mass job automation.
On March 13, we will meet to discuss all these issues with a stellar group of researchers and speakers.
AGENDA
12 noon – 12:15 pm
Introduction to the Conference
Dean Trevor Farrow
Barnali Choudhury
Valerio De Stefano
12:15 pm – 2:15 pm
Artificial Intelligence and the Law – Barnali Choudhury, Chair
Allan Hutchinson Reflections on Singularity: AI and Law’s Multiplicity
Jon Penney How Safe Are AI Safety Standards?
Carys Craig The AI-Copyright Trap
Valerio De Stefano Artificial Intelligence and Work
Aida Abraha Examining AI Governance in the Workplace Context: A Comparative Analysis of Workplace Technology Regulations in Canada, the United States, and the European Union.
François Tanguay-Renaud, Contrasting Police Powers of Detention and Arrest in Canada and the United States: Is There a Place for Predictive AI and Some Thoughts about Racial Profiling and its Regulation
2:15 pm – 2:30 pm Coffee break
2:30 pm – 4:30 pm
Artificial intelligence and Human Rights Protection – Dean Trevor Farrow, Chair
Sean Rehaag Rights-Enhancing Tech: Using AI to Open the Black Box of Human Refugee Adjudication
Jake Okechukwu Effoduh How Artificial Intelligence is Bastardizing Paradigms of Human Rights in the Third World
James Sheptycki AI and the police intelligence division-of-labour; a Canadian perspective
Alexandra Scott Autonomous weapons systems and International Humanitarian Law
Anthony Sangiuliano Approaches to Prohibiting Algorithmic Discrimination under the Canadian Human Rights Act
Aneurin Thomas, Regulating Police Facial Recognition Technology: Issues and Options
4:30 pm – 4:45 pm Coffee break
4:45 pm – 6:15 pm
Artificial Intelligence, Due Process and Legal Ethics – Roundtable – Valerio De Stefano, Chair
Dean Trevor Farrow, Osgoode Hall Law School
Glenn Stuart, Law Society of Ontario
Amy Salyzyn, University of Ottawa
Patricia McMahon, Osgoode Hall Law School
Richard Haigh and Stephen Fulford, Osgoode Hall Law School
Giuseppina (Pina) D’Agostino, Osgoode Hall Law School
Molly Reynolds, Torys
For any further info, please feel free to contact Prof Valerio De Stefano, by nathansoncentre@osgoode.yorku.ca and copying vdestefano@osgoode.yorku.ca.