The Harvard Crimson's Jen L. Phan recaps a recent conversation between Meg Marco, Jordi Weinstock, and Kashmir Hill surrounding the psychological effects of humans forming close 'personal' ...
Affiliates Bruce Schneier and Nathan Sanders offer an optimistic outlook: AI-generated harms are neither natural nor inevitable, and beneficial uses of the technology are possible.
The Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society is thrilled to announce the Fall Speaker Series! Building on the success of the Spring Speaker Series, these topical events will feature a wide range of ...
Mailyn Fidler details the recent UN Cybercrime Convention, arguing that most analyses have overlooked the Convention's implications for global mutual legal assistance, regardless of whether the crime ...
In a guest post for the Daily Nous Peter Suber, David Weinberger, and coauthors ask whether the future of academic philosophy lies in universities.
Joe Bak-Coleman and coauthors note the difficulty posed by the evidence used to evaluate the tech industry being generated from within the industry. "For researchers who decide to precede in ...
In a new piece for ImpactAlpha, Paul Fehlinger urges investors to disentangle investing in AI from investing with AI. Only by considering each of these elements separately can firms do their due ...
Maroussia Lévesque and coauthor Sacha Alanoca argue that, despite its espousing free market ideals, the deregulatory narrative is a misconception.
Though Google Chrome's market share has sat above 60% for several years, ChatGPT's newly unveiled Atlas might threaten the browser's dominance. George Chalhoub weighs in on the integration of AI into ...
"Technology isn't neutral; it's ambivalent" proclaims Faculty Associate Vasilis Kostakis, answering questions about technology, economics, and the future of our species with The Other School. He ...