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The Fifth Edition of The Athens Roundtable to Take Place in Washington, D.C.

The Fifth Edition of The Athens Roundtable on AI and the Rule of Law will convene in Washington D.C. on November 30th and December 1st, 2023, to examine the risks associated with foundation models and generative AI, and explore governance mechanisms that could serve to reduce these risks.

Speakers will include U.S. Senator Richard Blumenthal, U.S. Representative Yvette Clarke, Turing Award winner Yoshua Bengio, Tanzanian Parliamentarian Neema Lugangira, UN Secretary-General’s Envoy on Technology Amandeep Singh Gill, U.S. EEOC Commissioner Keith E. Sonderling, European MEP Dragoș Tudorache, Tawana Petty, Elham Tabassi, Rumman Chowdhury, Vilas Dhar, Gary Marcus, Yi Zeng, Irene Solaiman, among others.

The Athens Roundtable will be organized by The Future Society and co-hosted by the Institute for International Science and Technology Policy (IISTP) at the Elliott School of International Affairs, the NIST-NSF Institute for Trustworthy AI in Law & Society (TRAILS), UNESCO, the OECD, the World Bank, IEEE, Homo Digitalis, the Center for AI and Digital Policy (CAIDP), Paul, Weiss LLP, Arnold & Porter, and the Patrick J. McGovern Foundation. It will be held under the aegis of the Embassy of Greece in Washington D.C.

About The Athens Roundtable on AI and the Rule of Law

The Athens Roundtable is a civil society-led, international, multi-stakeholder forum on artificial intelligence and the rule of law. The Athens Roundtable was co-founded in 2019 by The Future Society under the aegis of the Presidency of the Hellenic Republic. Over four editions, it has convened dialogues with over 4,000 stakeholders from 120 countries—including representatives from the European Parliament, UNESCO, OECD, Council of Europe, IEEE, and European Commission, as well as national governments, the private sector, and civil society.

AI governance now stands at the forefront of national policy and legislative initiatives. This year was marked by myriad U.S. congressional hearings, proposed bills, voluntary commitments by leading AI companies, and the Biden Administration’s sweeping executive order in November. Across the pond, the UK hosted the first AI Safety Summit, China introduced specific regulations for generative AI, and the EU is finalizing trilogue discussions on the AI Act. As regulatory efforts evolve worldwide, courts face pivotal cases that could transform technology, individual autonomy, collective truth, and the fabric of our democratic systems.

There is a need to act on these policy windows and implement effective governance mechanisms to ensure that AI systems improve the welfare and well-being of people, contribute to positive, sustainable global economic activity, increase innovation and productivity, and help respond to key global challenges. It will be critical to reconcile technological advancements with robust governance frameworks that uphold the rule of law—now and in the future.

Contact Information:
Samuel Curtis
Associate
[email protected]


Original Source: The Fifth Edition of The Athens Roundtable to Take Place in Washington, D.C.

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