
Our Events
View all the latest events from the Centre and our Partners.
This Technomoral Conversation will look at issues ranging from the AI industry’s copyright violations, to the responses from creatives in the UK and elsewhere, to the wider ethical and political questions about the role of AI in creative practice and culture.
Convened and hosted by Dr Audrey Borowski (EFI Visiting Fellow), the "Al and the Digital" seminar series sets out to explore the theoretical ramifications and implications of algorithmic systems and digital tools, and how they shape our present and future worlds.
This Technomoral Conversation will look at issues ranging from the AI industry’s copyright violations, to the responses from creatives in the UK and elsewhere, to the wider ethical and political questions about the role of AI in creative practice and culture.
Past Events
Join us as we hear from EFI Visiting Fellow Dr Anissa Tanweer (University of Washington) on understanding data ethics as situated practice.
In this Technomoral Conversations panel, we will hear from leading voices from the Majority World on what they have learned from and about AI, and the issues and visions they would like to see taken up.
The values that govern our lives are increasingly explicit: defined by algorithms and institutions to be as clear, precise and quantifiable as possible. In this talk, Professor Nguyen explores two dangers of adopting these values as our own: value capture and value collapse.
The values that govern our lives are increasingly explicit: defined by algorithms and institutions to be as clear, precise and quantifiable as possible. In this talk, Professor Nguyen explores two dangers of adopting these values as our own: value capture and value collapse.
Join us in person on Friday the 18th of October for a workshop with Professor C. Thi Nguyen, where we will look at an excerpt from his upcoming book, The Score!
This workshop will feature accessible contributions from experts in algorithms that reveal or fix AI vulnerabilities, and researchers from philosophy, law and the social sciences with interests in the wider implications of adversarial attack algorithms.