April 25, 2022 – April 29, 2022

AI and Human
Rights Forum

Virtual

Register now

Welcome to the 2022 AI and Human Rights Forum!

From surveillance and misinformation to facial recognition and foreign influence, advances in Artificial Intelligence have been rapid, raising questions about potential impacts on the rights of people around the globe. Join the AI and Human Rights Forum to hear from some of the world’s top experts on disinformation, online hate and freedom of speech, authoritarian tech, AI ethics and governance, and global cooperation.

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Days Hours Minutes Seconds

Featured Speakers

The event will take place over five days and will feature panel discussions from leading global experts working at the intersection of AI and human rights.

The event will be streamed live on YouTube, LinkedIn, and Facebook.

John Todd

General Manager of Quad9 

Dmitri Vitaliev

Founder and director of eQualitie 

Courtney Radsch

Fellow, UCLA Institute for Technology, Law & Policy and Sr. Fellow, Center for International Governance Innovation

Matthias Kettemann

Professor of Innovation, Theory and Philosophy of Law

Asha Allen

Center for Democracy and Technology

Eliska Pirkova

Access Now

Laura Okkonen

Investor Advocate at Access Now

Sam Jones

President, Heartland Initiative

Rachel Nishimoto

Manager of ESG Stewardship at Parnassus Investments

Schedule

April
25

Opening statement

10:30 AM

AI in Content Governance and Content Control: Policy Responses to Safeguard Free Speech

11:00 AM
April
26

Artificial Intelligence, Homogenization Policy, and the China Uyghur Crisis

11:00 AM

Robot Rights and the
Human Rights Regime

1:00 PM
April
27

Equal Access to AI Governance

11:00 AM

Navigating the surveillance technology ecosystem

1:00 PM
April
28

AI driven attacks on civilian population and infrastructure: What should Africa be worried about?

11:00 AM
April
29

AI and the spread of hate speech & propaganda

11:00 AM

Censorship Dialogues

1:00 PM

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now

Partners

Speakers In the Media!

Tech’s role in Russia’s war on UkraineChina's high-tech repression of Uyghurs is more sinister — and lucrative — than it seems, anthropologist saysIA et discrimination