This is AI x Multilateralism, a playlist of conversations at the UN Library & Archives Geneva where we’re joined by experts who help us unpack the many ideas and issues at the nexus of AI and international cooperation. For this conversation we’re joined by Emily Tucker, Executive Director at the Center on Privacy & Technology and Adjunct Professor of Law, at Georgetown Law. There are many calls today to enact redlines for AI, but what about redlines for data?
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This is AI x Multilateralism, a playlist of conversations where we’re joined by experts who help us unpack the many ideas at the nexus of AI and international cooperation. In this episode we ask: can AI help us better predict, respond to, and recover from crises? We’re joined by Dr. Martin Waehlisch, Associate Professor of Transformative Technologies, Innovation and Global Affairs at the University of Birmingham. He’s also part of the Research Team of the Crisis Computing Project, a global community of scholars and practitioners who are driven to put computation to better use.
This is AI x Multilateralism, a playlist of conversations at the Commons, where experts who help us unpack the many ideas and issues at the nexus of AI and international cooperation. Today, the majority of AI development and deployment is controlled by a small number of powerful firms. Is there another way, one where where AI serves the common good? Jacob Taylor and Joshua Tan make the case for Public AI: shared, open AI infrastructure that is publicly responsible and harnessed to solve collective problems.
At the UN Library & Archives Geneva, we’re thrilled to join in celebrations for International Archives Week 2025. As part of this year’s theme, #ArchivesAreAccessible: Archives for Everyone, we asked some of our research community to share how online access to the League of Nations Archives in particular has changed their work.
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