There was some discussion of legal informatics issues at the panel entitled Intelligent Systems and Robotics: How Will These Technologies Interact with Policy? held 16 May 2014 at Microsoft Innovation and Policy Center, Washington, DC, USA.
The panelists were Meg Leta Ambrose , Ryan Calo , Margot Kaminski , and Daniel Siciliano .
I think the panel was followed by presentations by students in the panelists’ courses on robot law.
Click here for a description of the event.
One Twitter hashtag for the event was: #intelligentapps
Click here for a storify of Twitter tweets and photos from the event.
Click here for archived Twitter tweets from the event, in .csv format.
The legal informatics topics discussed at the event included the following:
- Ryan Calo discussed law firms’ “delving into #robotics, drones, #intelligentapps”
- Meg Leta Ambrose discussed “her research on how parole boards use algorithms & #IntelligentSystems to evaluate prisoners”
- Ryan Calo said: “One of the students wrote her dissertation on privacy by design for drones.”
HT @EJWalters
Filed under: Applications, Conference resources, Policy debates, Storify, Technology developments, Technology tools, Tweet archives Tagged: #intelligentapps, Artificial intelligence and law, Criminal justice information systems, Daniel Siciliano, Drone law, Drones and privacy by design, Drones and privacy law, Intelligent Systems and Robotics: How Will These Technologies Interact with Policy?, Law and robotics, Law and robots, Legal decision support systems, Legal expert systems, Margot Kaminski, Meg Leta Ambrose, Parole information systems, Privacy by design, Privacy law and drones, Privacy law information systems, Robot law, Robotics and law, Robots and law, Ryan Calo
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