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Today's panel discussion is an extra special one. We welcome three guests from the Human Technology Institute, or HTI, to talk about how AI can be used and directed for building the kind of future we actually want. Sally Cripps, Edward Santow, and Nicholas Davis offer a host of insightful opinions and reflections from their work in the field, commenting on the most recent developments we are seeing around OpenAI and ChatGPT, prioritising ethics and governance, and how Australia might approach playing an important part in the emerging global landscape. We also spend some time on the responsibilities of third parties and how data science models can most effectively be used for real-world improvements. So if you would like some great perspectives on where innovation is most needed, how the country might proceed in the AI space, and how it all starts with a policy, be sure to listen in!
Key Points From This Episode:
Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode:
Sally Cripps on LinkedIn
Ed Santow on LinkedIn
Nick Davis on LinkedIn
Human Technology Institute
UTS
World Economic Forum
The Fourth Industrial Revolution
Klaus Schwab
DALL-E
Nick Cave
Gary Marcus
ChatGPT
OpenAI
ISO
Kate Crawford
Carnegie Foundation Legal Education Study
Amsterdam City Contractual Terms for Trustworthy Algorithms
Judgment Under Uncertainty: Heuristics and Biases
The Emergence of Probability
Against the Gods: The Remarkable Story of Risk
National AI Centre
Everyday AI Podcast
Stela SOLAR
Natalie Rouse on LinkedIn
Dr Kobi Leins
Dr Kobi Leins on LinkedIn
Dr Kobi Leins on Twitter
Eliiza
5
33 ratings
Today's panel discussion is an extra special one. We welcome three guests from the Human Technology Institute, or HTI, to talk about how AI can be used and directed for building the kind of future we actually want. Sally Cripps, Edward Santow, and Nicholas Davis offer a host of insightful opinions and reflections from their work in the field, commenting on the most recent developments we are seeing around OpenAI and ChatGPT, prioritising ethics and governance, and how Australia might approach playing an important part in the emerging global landscape. We also spend some time on the responsibilities of third parties and how data science models can most effectively be used for real-world improvements. So if you would like some great perspectives on where innovation is most needed, how the country might proceed in the AI space, and how it all starts with a policy, be sure to listen in!
Key Points From This Episode:
Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode:
Sally Cripps on LinkedIn
Ed Santow on LinkedIn
Nick Davis on LinkedIn
Human Technology Institute
UTS
World Economic Forum
The Fourth Industrial Revolution
Klaus Schwab
DALL-E
Nick Cave
Gary Marcus
ChatGPT
OpenAI
ISO
Kate Crawford
Carnegie Foundation Legal Education Study
Amsterdam City Contractual Terms for Trustworthy Algorithms
Judgment Under Uncertainty: Heuristics and Biases
The Emergence of Probability
Against the Gods: The Remarkable Story of Risk
National AI Centre
Everyday AI Podcast
Stela SOLAR
Natalie Rouse on LinkedIn
Dr Kobi Leins
Dr Kobi Leins on LinkedIn
Dr Kobi Leins on Twitter
Eliiza