29
October, 2019
10:00am
This event is open to:

AI and Digital Policy in China

Past Event

China’s government and tech industry have great ambitions for artificial intelligence development and leadership, and Chinese society is facing economic, ethical, and regulatory challenges related to AI much like those around the world. At a time when the U.S. and Chinese governments are locked in escalating disputes over technology and trade, understanding Chinese ambitions, realities, and politics surrounding digital technologies is ever more important.

Hosted by DigiChina, a project of the Stanford Cyber Policy Center Program on Geopolitics, Technology and Governance and the New America Cybersecurity Initiative.

The organizers are grateful for the support of the Harvard-MIT Ethics and Governance of AI Initiative.

Shazeda Ahmed
PhD Candidate, UC Berkeley School of Information; Predoctoral Fellow, Stanford Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence and Center for International Security and Cooperation
Rogier Creemers
Assistant Professor in the Law and Governance of China, University of Leiden
Andrew Grotto
William J. Perry International Security Fellow and Director of the Program on Geopolitics, Technology and Governance at the Stanford Cyber Policy Center; Visiting Fellow, Hoover Institution
Samm Sacks
Cybersecurity Policy and China Digital Economy Fellow, New America
Katharin Tai
PhD Student, Political Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Graham Webster
Coordinating Editor, Stanford-New America DigiChina Project; China Digital Economy Fellow, New America
Wu Shenkuo
Professor of Law, Beijing Normal University
Julia Voo
Research Director, China Cyber Policy Initiative, Harvard Belfer Center
Yuan Yang
China Technology Correspondent, Financial Times