The Law and Ethics of AI
[The Law and Ethics of AI]
I was honored to speak at the 15th International Seminar on Competition and Commercial Law in the Digital Era, organized by the Shalom Comparative Research Institute and the Eliyahu Law & Tech Center at Ono Academic College, and co-hosted with Fordham University School of Law and Yale Law School’s Yale Information Society Project. Many thanks to Shlomit Yanisky-Ravid.
My session, “The Law and Ethics of AI,” explored how overlapping legal frameworks like antitrust, copyright, privacy, and the right of publicity, can together create a more inclusive and effective model for AI governance. Drawing on my research on polyphonic AI regulation, I discussed how the U.S., Europe, and Asia are each contributing distinct yet complementary approaches to responsible AI oversight.
It was inspiring to join global colleagues such as Ariel Ezrachi (Faculty of Law, University of Oxford), Ryan Abbott (School of Law, University of Surrey), Deborah Gerhardt (University of North Carolina School of Law), and Patricia Vargas-Leon (Yale Law School) in advancing dialogue at the intersection of law, technology, and ethics.