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Who's Responsible for ChatGPT? Building a Public Vision for AI
Who's Responsible for ChatGPT? Building a Public Vision for AI

Thu, Aug 03

|

Zoom

Who's Responsible for ChatGPT? Building a Public Vision for AI

What personal, corporate, and political policies should regulate the use and development of ChatGPT? Who pays when ChatGPT causes harm? Let’s talk about the values that should inform our thinking about the opportunities and risks of this rapidly accelerating technology, both locally and globally.

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Time & Location

Aug 03, 2023, 9:00 AM EDT – Aug 05, 2023, 5:00 PM EDT

Zoom

About the event

What personal, corporate, and political policies should regulate the use and development of ChatGPT? Who pays when ChatGPT causes harm? Let’s talk about the values that should inform our thinking about the opportunities and risks of this rapidly accelerating technology, both locally and globally. 

The free Zoom conference will be held August 3-5.

CONFERENCE SCHEDULE: https://www.philosophyforhumans.com/conference-schedule

Topics include:

  • Ethical Considerations in AI Development and Deployment  How can we ensure that AI is developed and used in ways that genuinely prioritize fairness, transparency, and inclusivity? What steps can be taken to make AI safer, minimizing risks such as misinformation and biased content?
  • Balancing Innovation and Social Responsibility  Can we find a sweet spot between totally shutting down AI development and losing control of an unsafe AI? How do we avoid a future in which the benefits of AI systems are captured by a select few innovators in wealthy nations?
  • Regulation, Policy, and Liability  What role should governments, businesses, and individuals play in creating a socially responsible AI ecosystem? Who should bear the costs when AI causes harm, given the potentially global impacts on inequality and the environment?

We are organizing this event together with Indiana University Bloomington: the Philosophy Department, the Center of Excellence for Women & Technology, the College of Arts + Sciences, the Institute for Digital Arts & Humanities, and the Luddy AI Center.

Special thanks to Kirk Ludwig, Edward Comentale, Fritz Breithaupt, Kate Abramson, Alexandra Burlingame, and KayLee Witt for their help.

More information at: https://www.philosophyforhumans.com/the-conference

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