EXALT

EXALT

EXALT (Exchanges on Law, Technology and Society) is a conversation series focussed on discussing the societal and legal implications of technology. Curated by Prabhat Mishra and Mandira Narain, research candidates working on issues related to AI and privacy respectively. Conceptualised by Dr. Nupur Chowdhury, Assistant Professor, CSLG, JNU. Run by Centre for the Study of Law and Governance (CSLG). Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), New Delhi, India.

Episodes

  1. 01/10/2022

    Global Data Justice with Dr. Linnet Taylor and Siddharth Peter de Souza

    Massive availability of data and regulating ways of extracting data from end users has been a conundrum for regulators globally. Additionally, data protection laws on the global level often fall flat on grasping local specificities and subjective negotiations with respect to people’s strategy of engaging with data on an everyday basis. Our speakers, Dr. Linnet Taylor and Siddharth Peter de Souza posit a justice-based governance framework to assess international norm- building for data governance besides evaluating the ways in which justice materializes at the ground level of the user. The speakers illustrate the ‘Global Data Justice’ project and also engage with a set of enthralling questions from the live audience. Guest profile:  Linnet Taylor is Associate Professor at the Tilburg Institute for Law, Technology, and Society (TILT), in the Netherlands. Her research focuses on digital data, representation and democracy, with particular attention to transnational governance issues. She leads the ERC Global Data Justice project, which aims to develop a social-justice-informed framework for governance of data technologies on the global level. Siddharth Peter de Souza is a Post-Doctoral researcher at the Global Data Justice project at the Tilburg Institute for Law, Technology, and Society (TILT). He is interested in the role data plays at the intersection of law and development, and works on how to think of questions of data governance in plural legal contexts.  Hosts: Prabhat Mishra & Mandira Narain

    1h 18m
  2. 01/10/2022

    Privacy and Data Protection in Smart Cities with Dr. Maša Galič

    Does 'smarter' necessarily mean 'safer'? “Smart City” projects around the world do claim so. Smart cities are often characterised by prominent deployment of technological devices and mechanisms of data aggregation. Framing them as essential to having safe living spaces has grave implications on human dignity, privacy and basic liberties. Dr. Maša Galič takes us through her fascinating work on the ‘Stratumseind living lab’, a smart city project in Eindhoven, Netherlands. Her work showcases newer techniques of predictive policing through the use of light and sound in a smart city and encompasses the larger debates around technological solutionism,  privacy in public places and repercussions on autonomy and self-development. Guest profile: Maša Galič is assistant professor in Data Protection and Criminal Procedure  Law at the Criminal law & criminology department of the Vrije Universiteit in Amsterdam (VU Amsterdam; NL). Prior to this, she was a researcher at the Tilburg Institute for Law, Technology and Society (Tilburg University; NL), where she obtained her PhD in 2019 on the topic of privacy and surveillance in smart cities. Maša's current research focuses on the regulation of digital investigation powers for law enforcement purposes, which function at the intersection of criminal procedure law and data protection law. Her other research interests include cybercrime, privacy, surveillance and smart cities.” Hosts: Prabhat Mishra & Mandira Narain

    1h 11m
  3. 01/10/2022

    Book Discussion 'The Reality Game: How the Next Wave of Technology Will Break the Truth' with Dr. Samuel Woolley

    Midst the rise of misinformation, disinformation and propaganda steering political communication, the present session delves into Dr. Samuel Woolley’s book, 'The Reality Game: How the Next Wave of Technology Will Break the Truth'. The author discusses the serious harms of technologies such as deep fakes and virtual reality when used subtly to manoeuvre public opinions and users worldviews. The author brings forth fascinating case studies of countries such as India, USA, besides others and also throws light on methodological underpinnings for researchers to view ‘propaganda’ embedded within a context, otherwise often placed in a disconnected experimental lab. Guest Profile: Samuel C. Woolley is an assistant professor in the School of Journalism and an assistant professor, by courtesy, in the School of Information--both at the University of Texas at Austin. He is also the project director for propaganda research at the Center for Media Engagement (CME) at UT. Woolley is currently a research associate at the Project for Democracy and the Internet at Stanford University. Woolley’s research is focused on how emergent technologies are used in and around global political communication. His public work on computational propaganda and social media bots has appeared in venues including Wired, the Guardian,TechCrunch, Motherboard, Slate, and The Atlantic. Hosts: Prabhat Mishra & Mandira Narain

    39 min

About

EXALT (Exchanges on Law, Technology and Society) is a conversation series focussed on discussing the societal and legal implications of technology. Curated by Prabhat Mishra and Mandira Narain, research candidates working on issues related to AI and privacy respectively. Conceptualised by Dr. Nupur Chowdhury, Assistant Professor, CSLG, JNU. Run by Centre for the Study of Law and Governance (CSLG). Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), New Delhi, India.