Margot E. Kaminski | |
---|---|
Occupation | Associate Professor |
Known for | Artificial Intelligence Information Privacy AI Ethics |
Academic background | |
Alma mater | Harvard University (B.A.) Yale University (J.D.) |
Academic work | |
Institutions | University of Colorado Law School Yale Law School Ohio State University Moritz College of Law |
Margot E. Kaminski is an American professor who works at the intersection of artificial intelligence,privacy,information governance,and online civil liberties. [1] She is currently an Associate Professor at the University of Colorado Law School and the Director of Privacy Initiative at the Silicon Flatirons Center for Law,Technology,and Entrepreneurship. Her research examines the impacts of new technologies,including autonomous systems,on individual rights to help shape policy and regulation of AI.
Prior to joining Colorado Law,Kaminski was a lecturer at Yale Law School, [2] an Assistant Professor at the Ohio State University Moritz College of Law from 2014 to 2017,and had served as a law clerk to Andrew Kleinfeld,senior judge of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.
Kaminski was selected as one of the 100 Brilliant Women in AI Ethics in 2020. [3]
Kaminski graduated magna cum laude with a B.A. from Harvard University in 2004,where she wrote for The Harvard Crimson . [4] [5] [6] She graduated from Yale Law School in 2010. While at Yale,she co-founded the Media Freedom and Information Access Clinic and was a Knight Law and Media Scholar. [4]
After graduation from Yale Law School,Kaminski clerked for Andrew Kleinfeld of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals and served as the executive director of the Information Society Project at Yale Law School for three years. Then,she joined the Ohio State University Moritz College of Law as an Assistant Professor in 2014,specializing in privacy,intellectual property,and technology law. [7] There,she was selected to serve as fellow of the DC Center for Democracy &Technology. [8]
Margot Kaminski is currently an associate professor at the University of Colorado Law School and Director of the Privacy Initiative at Silicon Flatirons. [9]
In 2019,Kaminski co-authored Algorithmic Impact Assessments under the GDPR with Giancludio Malgieri. The paper attempted to link the risks of profile algorithms,automated decision-making with the EU General Data Protection Regulation tools towards more accountability. Both presented their paper to the U.S. Senate. [10] Her works have also been published in The New York Times , [11] The Economist , [12] and The Atlantic . [13]
The University of Colorado Law School is one of the professional graduate schools within the University of Colorado System. It is a public law school,with more than 500 students attending and working toward a Juris Doctor or Master of Studies in Law. The Wolf Law Building is located in Boulder,Colorado,and is sited on the south side of the University of Colorado at Boulder campus. The law school houses the William A. Wise Law Library,which is a regional archive for federal government materials and is open to the public. United States Supreme Court Justice Wiley Blount Rutledge graduated from the University of Colorado Law School in 1922.
The ethics of artificial intelligence is the branch of the ethics of technology specific to artificially intelligent systems. It is sometimes divided into a concern with the moral behavior of humans as they design,make,use and treat artificially intelligent systems,and a concern with the behavior of machines, in machine ethics.
Peter P. Swire is the J.Z. Liang Chair in the School of Cybersecurity and Privacy in the College of Computing at the Georgia Institute of Technology. Swire is also Professor of Law and Ethics in the Scheller College of Business and has an appointment by courtesy with the School of Public Policy. He is an internationally recognized expert in privacy law. Swire is also a senior fellow at the Future of Privacy Forum and has served on the National Academies of Science and Engineering Forum on Cyber Resilience. During the Clinton administration,he became the first person to hold the position of Chief Counselor for Privacy in the Office of Management and Budget. In this role,he coordinated administration policy on privacy and data protection,including interfacing with privacy officials in foreign countries. He may be best known for shaping the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act Privacy Rule while serving as the Chief Counselor for Privacy. In November 2012 he was named as co-chair of the Tracking Protection Working Group of the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C),to attempt to mediate a global Do Not Track standard. In August 2013,President Obama named Swire as one of five members of the Director of National Intelligence Review Group on Intelligence and Communications Technologies.
Latanya Arvette Sweeney is an American computer scientist. She is the Daniel Paul Professor of the Practice of Government and Technology at the Harvard Kennedy School and in the Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences at Harvard University. She is the founder and director of the Public Interest Tech Lab,founded in 2021 with a $3 million grant from the Ford Foundation as well as the Data Privacy Lab. She is the current Faculty Dean in Currier House at Harvard.
Danielle Keats Citron is a Jefferson Scholars Foundation Schenck Distinguished Professor in Law at the University of Virginia School of Law,where she teaches information privacy,free expression,and civil rights law. Citron is the author of "The Fight for Privacy:Protecting Dignity,Identity,and Love in the Digital Age" and "Hate Crimes in Cyberspace" (2014). She also serves as the Vice President of the Cyber Civil Rights Initiative,an organization which provides assistance and legislative support to victims of online abuse. Prior to joining UVA Law,Citron was an Austin B. Fletcher Distinguished Professor of Law at Boston University Law School,and was also the Morton &Sophia Macht Professor of Law at the University of Maryland School of Law.
Amie Stepanovich is a lawyer specializing in cybersecurity,privacy law and drone surveillance. She is the executive director of Silicon Flatirons,a research center at University of Colorado Boulder.
Philip Jacob Weiser is an American lawyer and politician who has served as the 39th Attorney General of Colorado since 2019. He is the Hatfield Professor of Law and Telecommunications,executive director and Founder of the Silicon Flatirons Center for Law,Technology,and Entrepreneurship,and Dean Emeritus at the University of Colorado Law School. He previously served in the Obama and Clinton Administrations in the White House and Justice Department. A member of the Democratic Party,he was elected Attorney General for the State of Colorado in the 2018 election,defeating Republican George Brauchler on November 6,2018. He was re-elected in 2022.
Kevin Stuart Bankston is an American activist and attorney,who specialized in the areas of free speech and privacy law. He is currently Privacy Policy Director at Facebook,where he leads policy work on AI and emerging technologies. He was formerly the director of the Open Technology Institute (OTI) at the New America Foundation in Washington,D.C.
Meredith Whittaker is the president of the Signal Foundation and serves on their board of directors. She was formerly the Minderoo Research Professor at New York University (NYU),and the co-founder and faculty director of the AI Now Institute. She also served as a senior advisor on AI to Chair Lina Khan at the Federal Trade Commission. Whittaker was employed at Google for 13 years,where she founded Google's Open Research group and co-founded the M-Lab. In 2018,she was a core organizer of the Google Walkouts and resigned from the company in July 2019.
Terah Lyons is known for her expertise in the field of artificial intelligence and technology policy. Lyons was the executive director of the Partnership on AI and was a policy advisor to the United States Chief Technology Officer Megan Smith in President Barack Obama's Office of Science and Technology Policy.
Limor Shmerling Magazanik is a thought leader in digital technology policy,ethics and regulation. She is an expert in data governance,privacy,AI ethics and cybersecurity policy. Since November 2018,she has been the managing director of the Israel Tech Policy Institute (ITPI) and a senior fellow at the Future of Privacy Forum. She is a visiting scholar at the Duke University Sanford School of Public Policy. Previously,for 10 years,she was director at the Israeli Privacy Protection Authority and an adjunct lecturer at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem Faculty of Law and the Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya School of Law and a research advisor at the Milken Innovation Center. Her background also includes positions in the private sector,law firms and high-tech industry. She has promoted policy initiatives in various technology sectors and has been an advocate for compliance with data protection and privacy by design.
Ifeoma Yvonne Ajunwa is a Nigerian-American writer,AI Ethics legal scholar,sociologist,and tenured professor of law at the University of North Carolina School Of Law in the United States. She is currently a Visiting Fellow at Yale Law School's Information Society Project (ISP) and she has been a Faculty Associate at the Berkman Klein Center at Harvard Law School since 2017. From 2021–2022,she was a Fulbright Scholar to Nigeria where she studied the role of law for tech start-ups. At UNC Law,she is the Founding Director of the AI Decision-Making Research (AI-DR) Program at UNC Law where she designed and created the first ever clearinghouse for scholarship and research on AI and the Law. She was previously an assistant professor of labor and employment law at Cornell University from 2017–2020,earning tenure there in 2020.
Sandra Wachter is a professor and senior researcher in data ethics,artificial intelligence,robotics,algorithms and regulation at the Oxford Internet Institute. She is a former Fellow of The Alan Turing Institute.
The regulation of artificial intelligence is the development of public sector policies and laws for promoting and regulating artificial intelligence (AI);it is therefore related to the broader regulation of algorithms. The regulatory and policy landscape for AI is an emerging issue in jurisdictions globally,including in the European Union and in supra-national bodies like the IEEE,OECD and others. Since 2016,a wave of AI ethics guidelines have been published in order to maintain social control over the technology. Regulation is considered necessary to both encourage AI and manage associated risks. In addition to regulation,AI-deploying organizations need to play a central role in creating and deploying trustworthy AI in line with the principles of trustworthy AI,and take accountability to mitigate the risks. Regulation of AI through mechanisms such as review boards can also be seen as social means to approach the AI control problem.
Anja Kaspersen is a director for Global Markets Development,New Frontiers and Emerging Spaces at IEEE,the world's largest technical professional organisation. Kaspersen is also a senior fellow at Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs where she co-directs the Artificial Intelligence Equality Initiative with Wendell Wallach. With scholars and thinkers in the field of technology governance,supported by Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs and IEEE,Kaspersen and Wallach provided a Proposal for International governance of AI.
Andrea M. Matwyshyn is a United States law professor and engineering professor at The Pennsylvania State University. She is known as a scholar of technology policy,particularly as an expert at the intersection of law and computer security and for her work with government. She is credited with originating the legal and policy concept of the Internet of Bodies.
Rashida Richardson is a visiting scholar at Rutgers Law School and the Rutgers Institute for Information Policy and the Law and an attorney advisor to the Federal Trade Commission. She is also an assistant professor of law and political science at the Northeastern University School of Law and the Northeastern University Department of Political Science in the College of Social Sciences and Humanities.
Cansu Canca is a moral and political philosopher,with a Ph.D. specializing in applied ethics,and founder and director of AI Ethics Lab. Formerly,she was a bioethicist at the University of Hong Kong,and an ethics researcher at Harvard Law School,Harvard School of Public Health,Harvard Medical School,National University of Singapore,Osaka University,and the World Health Organization.
Abeba Birhane is an Ethiopian-born cognitive scientist who works at the intersection of complex adaptive systems,machine learning,algorithmic bias,and critical race studies. Birhane's work with Vinay Prabhu uncovered that large-scale image datasets commonly used to develop AI systems,including ImageNet and 80 Million Tiny Images,carried racist and misogynistic labels and offensive images. She has been recognized by VentureBeat as a top innovator in computer vision and named as one of the 100 most influential persons in AI 2023 by TIME magazine.
Kay Firth-Butterfield is a lawyer,professor,and author specializing in the intersection of artificial intelligence,international relations,Business and AI ethics. She is the CEO of the Centre for Trustworthy Technology which is a Member of the World Economic Forum's Forth Industrial Revolution Network. Before starting her new position Kay was the head of AI and machine learning at the World Economic Forum. She was an adjunct professor of law at the University of Texas at Austin.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link)