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In an interview with Harvard Law Today, Noah Giansiracusa explains how companies deploy what some call "dynamic" or “surveillance pricing,” using individual customers' data as a primary algorithmic ...
BKC's Chief Technologist Greg Leppert details the collaboration between the Boston Public Library, HLS, and OpenAI.
Hosted by BKC and the IAPP, Navigate gathered global leaders across academic, government, technology, and civil society ...
How do the algorithms that populate our social media feeds actually work? In a piece for Time Magazine excerpted from his recent book Robin Hood Math, Noah Giansiracusa sheds light on the algorithms ...
When you talk with a chatbot, what does it “think” about you? Recent work in AI interpretability, based on high-dimensional geometry, is beginning to provide some intriguing answers. In this talk ...
Our contemporary debates about cybersecurity, surveillance and the law are steeped in 21st century technology, but the problem of interception is not new. Surveillance and information warfare played ...
Alongside two coauthors, Bruce Schneier argues that the US government and semiconductor firms alike must enforce (and comply with the enforcement of) regulations.
This is the home page of TagTeam. Suggested short URL for this page = bit.ly/tagteam-harvard TagTeam is an open-source tagging platform and feed aggregator developed for the Harvard Open Access ...
The promise of AI agents has led to claims of imminent and rapid adoption across fields. Companies have even promised to build AI agents that can automate all legal and scientific tasks. At the same ...
Join Sara Fish at BKC as she shares emerging research on Large Language Models (LLMs), and their promises, limitations, and risks.
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