Difference between revisions of "Law"

From
Jump to: navigation, search
m
m
(7 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 2: Line 2:
 
|title=PRIMO.ai
 
|title=PRIMO.ai
 
|titlemode=append
 
|titlemode=append
|keywords=artificial, intelligence, machine, learning, models, algorithms, data, singularity, moonshot, Tensorflow, Google, Nvidia, Microsoft, Azure, Amazon, AWS  
+
|keywords=artificial, intelligence, machine, learning, models, algorithms, data, singularity, moonshot, TensorFlow, Facebook, Google, Nvidia, Microsoft, Azure, Amazon, AWS  
 
|description=Helpful resources for your journey with artificial intelligence; videos, articles, techniques, courses, profiles, and tools  
 
|description=Helpful resources for your journey with artificial intelligence; videos, articles, techniques, courses, profiles, and tools  
 
}}
 
}}
Line 9: Line 9:
  
 
* [[Case Studies]]
 
* [[Case Studies]]
 +
** [[Risk, Compliance and Regulation]]
 
** [[Government Services]]
 
** [[Government Services]]
 +
** [[Law Enforcement]]
 +
* [[Other Challenges]] in Artificial Intelligence
 +
* [[Explainable / Interpretable AI]]
 +
* [[Bias and Variances]]
 +
* [[Privacy]]
 +
* [[Ethics]]
 
* [[Generative Adversarial Network (GAN)#Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA)|Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA)]]
 
* [[Generative Adversarial Network (GAN)#Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA)|Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA)]]
 
* [http://www.legalsifter.com/ LegalSifter]
 
* [http://www.legalsifter.com/ LegalSifter]
Line 16: Line 23:
 
* [http://interestingengineering.com/ai-vs-lawyers-the-future-of-artificial-intelligence-and-law AI vs. Lawyers: The Future of Artificial Intelligence and Law | Merve A. Kızrak - Interesting Engineering]
 
* [http://interestingengineering.com/ai-vs-lawyers-the-future-of-artificial-intelligence-and-law AI vs. Lawyers: The Future of Artificial Intelligence and Law | Merve A. Kızrak - Interesting Engineering]
 
* [http://www.bnh.ai/ Bnh.ai] ...a law firm focused on AI  ...[http://github.com/bnh-ai/resources Sample AI Incident Response Checklist]
 
* [http://www.bnh.ai/ Bnh.ai] ...a law firm focused on AI  ...[http://github.com/bnh-ai/resources Sample AI Incident Response Checklist]
 +
* [http://www.vanityfair.com/news/2018/05/could-a-stranger-hijack-your-smart-home Could a stranger hijack your smart home? | Vanity Fair] Perhaps most alarming of all is that hijacking an Amazon Echo does not appear to violate any existing laws. Our antiquated U.S. legal code hasn’t caught up with the likes of smart devices, and it’s legal—though “counter to the public interest,” per the Federal Communications Commission—to broadcast subliminal messages via machine. Subliminal messages may be considered a violation of [[privacy]], but that concept has not been successfully extended in court to machines. At least not yet.
  
 
{|<!-- T -->
 
{|<!-- T -->
Line 114: Line 122:
 
<youtube>pA6CGuXEKtQ</youtube>
 
<youtube>pA6CGuXEKtQ</youtube>
 
<b>How Smart Contracts Will Change the World | Olga Mack | TEDxSanFrancisco
 
<b>How Smart Contracts Will Change the World | Olga Mack | TEDxSanFrancisco
</b><br>Olga Mack is an experienced lawyer who developed a passion about the intersection of law and blockchain. In her talk she explains how smart contracts operates and why they matter. Lawyer, Adjunct Professor UC Berkeley, School of Law. Strategist at Quantstamp at the intersection of Blockchain and Smart Contracts. This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community.  
+
</b><br>Olga Mack is an experienced lawyer who developed a passion about the intersection of law and [[Decentralized: Federated & Distributed#Blockchain|blockchain]]. In her talk she explains how smart contracts operates and why they matter. Lawyer, Adjunct Professor UC Berkeley, School of Law. Strategist at Quantstamp at the intersection of [[Decentralized: Federated & Distributed#Blockchain|Blockchain]] and Smart Contracts. This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community.  
 
|}
 
|}
 
|<!-- M -->
 
|<!-- M -->
Line 121: Line 129:
 
||
 
||
 
<youtube>5vfZRuNMgfE</youtube>
 
<youtube>5vfZRuNMgfE</youtube>
<b>Automating freight smart contracts with IoT, AI and blockchain
+
<b>Automating freight smart contracts with IoT, AI and [[Decentralized: Federated & Distributed#Blockchain|blockchain]]
</b><br>Cory Skinner, CEO and Founder, RoadLaunch, discusses the value of a blockchain ecosystem in the freight industry.
+
</b><br>Cory Skinner, CEO and Founder, RoadLaunch, discusses the value of a [[Decentralized: Federated & Distributed#Blockchain|blockchain]] ecosystem in the freight industry.
 
|}
 
|}
 
|}<!-- B -->
 
|}<!-- B -->
  
== Blockchain, AI and Law ==
+
== [[Decentralized: Federated & Distributed#Blockchain|Blockchain]], AI and Law ==
* [[Blockchain and Artificial Intelligence]]
+
* [[Decentralized: Federated & Distributed#Blockchain|Decentralized: Federated & Distributed: Blockchain]]
  
 
{|<!-- T -->
 
{|<!-- T -->
Line 134: Line 142:
 
||
 
||
 
<youtube>MBKjpRuCvNE</youtube>
 
<youtube>MBKjpRuCvNE</youtube>
<b>Code is Not the Law: Blockchain Contracts and Artificial Intelligence
+
<b>Code is Not the Law: [[Decentralized: Federated & Distributed#Blockchain|Blockchain]] Contracts and Artificial Intelligence
</b><br>This presentation is from The Ethics of Artificial Intelligence conference that took place October 14-15, 2016. It was hosted by the NYU Center for Bioethics in conjunction with the NYU Center for Mind, Brain and Consciousness.Speaker: Adam Kolber (Brooklyn Law School)  Publisher: Livestream.com  
+
</b><br>This presentation is from The [[Ethics]] of Artificial Intelligence conference that took place October 14-15, 2016. It was hosted by the NYU Center for Bioethics in conjunction with the NYU Center for Mind, Brain and Consciousness.Speaker: Adam Kolber (Brooklyn Law School)  Publisher: Livestream.com  
 
|}
 
|}
 
|<!-- M -->
 
|<!-- M -->
Line 142: Line 150:
 
||
 
||
 
<youtube>AZBgWzplL_A</youtube>
 
<youtube>AZBgWzplL_A</youtube>
<b>Legal Technology Track: The Blockchain & AI: Smart Contracts, Machine Learning, & the Future
+
<b>Legal Technology Track: The [[Decentralized: Federated & Distributed#Blockchain|Blockchain]] & AI: Smart Contracts, Machine Learning, & the Future
</b><br>More than just buzzwords, emerging technologies like AI and blockchain are becoming tools used by lawyers and their clients every day. Learn from experts from Sagewise and Casetext about what these future technologies offers lawyers, and how you can start using these tools today. Host: Joshua Lenon: Lawyer in Residence, Clio  Guests: Dat Nguyen: VP, Special Projects at Sagewise and Jake Heller: CEO, Casetext
+
</b><br>More than just buzzwords, emerging technologies like AI and [[Decentralized: Federated & Distributed#Blockchain|blockchain]] are becoming tools used by lawyers and their clients every day. Learn from experts from Sagewise and Casetext about what these future technologies offers lawyers, and how you can start using these tools today. Host: Joshua Lenon: Lawyer in Residence, Clio  Guests: Dat Nguyen: VP, Special Projects at Sagewise and Jake Heller: CEO, Casetext
 
|}
 
|}
 
|}<!-- B -->
 
|}<!-- B -->
Line 179: Line 187:
 
||
 
||
 
<youtube>BTkXas77jeg</youtube>
 
<youtube>BTkXas77jeg</youtube>
<b>HH1
+
<b>Artificial Intelligence (AI) [[Ethics]]: Law, Governance and Public Policy
</b><br>BB1
+
</b><br>Artificial intelligence is fraught with legal, ethical, and public policy challenges. This episode brings two esteemed experts to discuss these issues and present guidance for both commercial companies and the public sector.
 +
 
 +
Dr. David A. Bray is CIO of Federal Communications Commission. He began work in public service at age 15, later serving in the private sector before returning as IT Chief for the CDC’s Bioterrorism Preparedness and Response Program during 9/11; volunteering to deploy to Afghanistan to “think differently” on military and humanitarian issues; and serving as a Senior Executive advocating for increased information interoperability, cybersecurity, and civil liberty protections. He serves as a Visiting Executive In-Residence at Harvard University, a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, and a Visiting Associate at the University of Oxford.
 +
 
 +
Kay Firth-Butterfield is a Barrister and part-time Judge and has worked as a mediator, arbitrator, business owner and professor in the United Kingdom. In the United States, she is Chief Officer, and member, of the Lucid.ai [[Ethics]] Advisory Panel (EAP) and an adjunct Professor of Law. Kay is a humanitarian with a strong sense of social justice and has advanced degrees in Law and International Relations. Kay co-founded the Consortium for Law and Policy of Artificial Intelligence and Robotics at the University of Texas and taught its first course: Artificial Intelligence and Emerging Technologies: Law and Policy. She is Vice Chair of the IEEE Industry Connections Committee “Global Initiative for Ethical Considerations in the Design of Autonomous Systems”. 
 
|}
 
|}
 
|<!-- M -->
 
|<!-- M -->
Line 187: Line 199:
 
||
 
||
 
<youtube>E48Yiu92B_U</youtube>
 
<youtube>E48Yiu92B_U</youtube>
<b>HH2
+
<b>Artificial Intelligence Today—Tomorrow's Legal Challenges of Machine Learning
</b><br>BB2
+
</b><br>United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit  2017 Ninth Circuit Judicial Conference
 +
 
 +
Artificial Intelligence Today—Tomorrow's Legal Challenges of Machine Learning Once an area limited primarily to academic study, Artificial Intelligence ("AI") now enables a constellation of technologies that we take for granted such as Internet search algorithms; computer and phone speech assistants; self-driving cars; health care diagnostics; investment platforms; industrial robots; and home heating; cooling and security. This is just the beginning. AI technology is growing rapidly. As it grows, it will not merely be an aid to human activity, but a powerful force that reshapes our world, our thinking, our lives, and our constitutional principles. In this panel presentation we discuss what AI is, its status today, what the future might hold, and some of the critical issues courts may face in addressing the impact of AI. Introduction: Michelle M. Pettit, Assistant U.S. Attorney, CAS At-Large Member, Conference Executive Committee
 +
 
 +
Speakers:
 +
Hon. Mariano-Florentino Cuéllar, Associate Justice, California Supreme Court
 +
Ryan Calo, Assistant Professor, University of Washington School of Law and Co-Director, Washington Tech Policy Lab, University of Washington
 +
Kate Crawford, Principal Researcher, Microsoft Corporation Social Media Collective, and Senior Fellow, New York University, Information and Law Institute
 +
Tim Hwang, Esq., Google Policy Team
 +
Yann LeCun, Director of AI Research at Facebook, Silver Professor of Dara Science, Computer Science, Neural Science, and Electrical Engineering, New York University
 +
William Santana Li, CEO & Founder, Knightscope Inc.
 
|}
 
|}
 
|}<!-- B -->
 
|}<!-- B -->
 
* [http://www.vanityfair.com/news/2018/05/could-a-stranger-hijack-your-smart-home Could a stranger hijack your smart home? | Vanity Fair] Perhaps most alarming of all is that hijacking an Amazon Echo does not appear to violate any existing laws. Our antiquated U.S. legal code hasn’t caught up with the likes of smart devices, and it’s legal—though “counter to the public interest,” per the Federal Communications Commission—to broadcast subliminal messages via machine. Subliminal messages may be considered a violation of privacy, but that concept has not been successfully extended in court to machines. At least not yet.
 

Revision as of 22:39, 3 November 2020

Youtube search... ...Google search

Artificial Intelligence for Law firms
A webinar on Artificial Intelligence - A beginners guide for small and medium sized law firms

Artificial intelligence and judicial systems
Artificial intelligence (#AI) raises new challenges for #justice and #judicial systems. The European Commission for the Efficiency of Justice of the Council of Europe, through its working group GT-QUAL, is working on it. Watch the video to learn more about this work. More infomation on www.coe.int/justice or www.coe.int/cepej

The world’s first AI legal assistant | Andrew Arruda | TED Institute
s a lawyer, Andrew Arruda too often saw the scales of justice tip in favor of the wealthy and partnered with a computer scientist to create the world’s first artificially intelligent legal assistant, ROSS. By speeding up legal research, Arruda wants ROSS to make the practice of law cheaper and fulfill the original promise of “justice for all.” TED@IBM was a TED-curated event produced in partnership with IBM. The third installment of TED@IBM brought a diverse collection of speakers and performers who recognize that ingenuity starts with one thing: a spark. And regardless of where the spark takes hold, inspiration demands action to reach its greatest potential. About the TED Institute: We know that innovative ideas and fresh approaches to challenging problems can be discovered inside visionary companies around the world. The TED Institute helps surface and share these insights. Every year, TED works with a group of select companies and foundations to identify internal ideators, inventors, connectors, and creators. Drawing on the same rigorous regimen that has prepared speakers for the TED main stage, TED Institute works closely with each partner, overseeing curation and providing intensive one-on-one talk development to sharpen and fine tune ideas.

Meet ROSS, Your Brand New Artificially Intelligent Lawyer
ROSS Intelligence builds artificially intelligent tools to enhance lawyer’s abilities – allowing them to do more than ever before humanly possible.

Intersecting the Future: AI, the future of work and the evolution of law | Beyond our Borders
Laura van Wyngaarden, Co-Founder, Diligen, a machine learning powered project management platform for legal contract review, Toronto, Canada Moderator: David Schwartz, Stanford Clinton Sr. and Zylpha Kilbride Clinton Research Professor of Law

Artificial justice: would robots make good judges?
When we want to solve a complicated math problem quickly and accurately, many of us will turn to a calculator without thinking twice. But would you want a machine determining the outcome of a complex legal case? This is the question Jaerin Jo got hung up on after participating in a debate about AI at her school. Jaerin's own father is a judge in South Korea, and imagining a future where robots preside over courtrooms brought up many brain-twisting questions about the appropriate uses of AI and the nature of justice itself. This thought-provoking Talk imagines what an AI justice system might look like, and asks you to consider how you would participate in it. This Talk was given at TED-Ed Weekend in New York City.

Machine Learning in the Criminal Justice Systems | Jens Ludwig | Talks at Google
Jens Ludwig, Director of the University of Chicago Crime Lab, talks about applying machine learning to reducing crime in Chicago and other public policy areas. In 2008, Ludwig helped found the Crime Lab to carry out data-driven methods to prevent crime and violence, and reduce the harms associated with the criminal justice system. Crime Lab’s work on gun policy, reducing crime, and education intervention studies have led to new policy initiatives in a number of US cities. The Crime Lab been has received coverage on major news outlets such as The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal. It is also the recent recipient of a $10 million donation from billionaire philanthropist Ken Griffin. Ludwig is the McCormick Foundation Professor of Social Service Administration, Law, and Public Policy at the University of Chicago. He is also a non-resident senior fellow in economic studies at the Brookings Institution, a research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), and co-director of the NBER's Working Group on the Economics of Crime. Ludwig is an economist by training and in 2012 was elected to the Institute of Medicine of the National Academies.

Machine Learning applied to judicial decisions - Danilo Mendes & Yan Teixeira (Legal Labs)
The need for technology applied to the legal sector has been a very relevant issue in the Brazilian scenario. The volume of processes is huge and the traditional methods of process analysis and execution no longer account for the demand. The process was physical, then turned digital, we inaugurated the next phase: intelligence on the mass litigations. The amount of Brazilian lawsuits shows a crisis scenario that is, at the same time, an important generator of opportunities. In this talk, we show how we developed Dra. Luzia, who was trained to make decisions in mass litigations. To do so, we elucidate how data mining and the application of machine learning, including deep learning, were applied in the development of the Artificial Intelligence platform Dra. Luzia. We believe that the Brazilian Judiciary will begin to use IA soon. This will directly impact the speed of procedural steps. Danilo Mendes: Researcher, Developer and Project Manager at Legal Labs with a degree in Software Engineering from the University of Brasília. He has worked on embedded projects to help disabled people and in web and mobile applications for companies and institutions. He was a researcher at California State University, Fullerton, with the goal of re-creating multidimensional sound for hearing aids. Participated in the conception, creation and development of Dr. Luzia.

Extracting Legal Data

Zack Witten: Extracting Structured Data from Legal Documents | PyData LA 2018
You’ll learn how to take a never-before-seen legal document, like a contract or a convertible note, and use machine learning to “read” the document and answer questions like “Who’s the investor” and “What interest rate did the parties agree to?” www.pydata.org

NLP on legal contracts - Uri Goren
PyCon Israel 2019

Contracts

How Smart Contracts Will Change the World | Olga Mack | TEDxSanFrancisco
Olga Mack is an experienced lawyer who developed a passion about the intersection of law and blockchain. In her talk she explains how smart contracts operates and why they matter. Lawyer, Adjunct Professor UC Berkeley, School of Law. Strategist at Quantstamp at the intersection of Blockchain and Smart Contracts. This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community.

Automating freight smart contracts with IoT, AI and blockchain
Cory Skinner, CEO and Founder, RoadLaunch, discusses the value of a blockchain ecosystem in the freight industry.

Blockchain, AI and Law

Code is Not the Law: Blockchain Contracts and Artificial Intelligence
This presentation is from The Ethics of Artificial Intelligence conference that took place October 14-15, 2016. It was hosted by the NYU Center for Bioethics in conjunction with the NYU Center for Mind, Brain and Consciousness.Speaker: Adam Kolber (Brooklyn Law School) Publisher: Livestream.com

Legal Technology Track: The Blockchain & AI: Smart Contracts, Machine Learning, & the Future
More than just buzzwords, emerging technologies like AI and blockchain are becoming tools used by lawyers and their clients every day. Learn from experts from Sagewise and Casetext about what these future technologies offers lawyers, and how you can start using these tools today. Host: Joshua Lenon: Lawyer in Residence, Clio Guests: Dat Nguyen: VP, Special Projects at Sagewise and Jake Heller: CEO, Casetext

Artificial Intelligence and Law – An Overview and History

Artificial Intelligence and Law – An Overview and History | Guest Speaker: Harry Surden
Associate Professor of Law, University of Colorado; Affiliated Faculty, CodeX

AccuracyAIlaw-1_resize_md.jpg

Artificial Intelligence Law

YouTube search... ...Google search

Having a usable definition of AI – and soon – is vital for regulation and governance because laws and policies simply will not operate without one. This definition problem crops up in all regulatory contexts, from ensuring truthful use of the term “AI” in product advertising right through to establishing how next-generation automated weapons systems (AWSs) are treated under the laws of war.

________________________________________

Artificial Intelligence (AI) Ethics: Law, Governance and Public Policy
Artificial intelligence is fraught with legal, ethical, and public policy challenges. This episode brings two esteemed experts to discuss these issues and present guidance for both commercial companies and the public sector.

Dr. David A. Bray is CIO of Federal Communications Commission. He began work in public service at age 15, later serving in the private sector before returning as IT Chief for the CDC’s Bioterrorism Preparedness and Response Program during 9/11; volunteering to deploy to Afghanistan to “think differently” on military and humanitarian issues; and serving as a Senior Executive advocating for increased information interoperability, cybersecurity, and civil liberty protections. He serves as a Visiting Executive In-Residence at Harvard University, a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, and a Visiting Associate at the University of Oxford.

Kay Firth-Butterfield is a Barrister and part-time Judge and has worked as a mediator, arbitrator, business owner and professor in the United Kingdom. In the United States, she is Chief Officer, and member, of the Lucid.ai Ethics Advisory Panel (EAP) and an adjunct Professor of Law. Kay is a humanitarian with a strong sense of social justice and has advanced degrees in Law and International Relations. Kay co-founded the Consortium for Law and Policy of Artificial Intelligence and Robotics at the University of Texas and taught its first course: Artificial Intelligence and Emerging Technologies: Law and Policy. She is Vice Chair of the IEEE Industry Connections Committee “Global Initiative for Ethical Considerations in the Design of Autonomous Systems”.

Artificial Intelligence Today—Tomorrow's Legal Challenges of Machine Learning
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit 2017 Ninth Circuit Judicial Conference

Artificial Intelligence Today—Tomorrow's Legal Challenges of Machine Learning Once an area limited primarily to academic study, Artificial Intelligence ("AI") now enables a constellation of technologies that we take for granted such as Internet search algorithms; computer and phone speech assistants; self-driving cars; health care diagnostics; investment platforms; industrial robots; and home heating; cooling and security. This is just the beginning. AI technology is growing rapidly. As it grows, it will not merely be an aid to human activity, but a powerful force that reshapes our world, our thinking, our lives, and our constitutional principles. In this panel presentation we discuss what AI is, its status today, what the future might hold, and some of the critical issues courts may face in addressing the impact of AI. Introduction: Michelle M. Pettit, Assistant U.S. Attorney, CAS At-Large Member, Conference Executive Committee

Speakers: Hon. Mariano-Florentino Cuéllar, Associate Justice, California Supreme Court Ryan Calo, Assistant Professor, University of Washington School of Law and Co-Director, Washington Tech Policy Lab, University of Washington Kate Crawford, Principal Researcher, Microsoft Corporation Social Media Collective, and Senior Fellow, New York University, Information and Law Institute Tim Hwang, Esq., Google Policy Team Yann LeCun, Director of AI Research at Facebook, Silver Professor of Dara Science, Computer Science, Neural Science, and Electrical Engineering, New York University William Santana Li, CEO & Founder, Knightscope Inc.