28th Annual BTLJ-BCLT Spring Symposium: (Day 2, Panel 1) Opening Keynote + Federal Approaches to AI Governance

course

PROGRAM INFO

  • Available Until 11/1/2026
  • Class Time 1:00 PM PT
  • Duration 130 min.
  • Format On-Demand
  • Program Code BCLT0053
  • CA General CLE Credits: 2.25 hr(s)

Price: $115.00

If you have a coupon, please add at checkout

STUDENT VIEW Add to Cart
 

DESCRIPTION

Program occurred February 27, 2025

Program Information | Agenda | Resources

Day 2, Panel 1: Opening Keynote

(Welcoming Remarks) Wayne Stacy, UC Berkeley Center for Law & Technology (BCLT)

(Opening Keynote) Deirdre Mulligan, UC Berkeley School of Information & UC Berkeley Center for Law & Technology (BCLT)

 

Day 2, Panel 1: Federal Approaches to AI Governance

Starts @ 44:10

Colleen Chien, UC Berkeley Center for Law & Technology (BCLT)

Sorelle Friedler, Haverford College

Olivia Zhu, The White House Office of Science and Technology Policy

Mona Sloane, University of Virginia

Alla Seiffert, Amazon Web Services

 

Initiatives to regulate artificial intelligence are being developed and implemented at the state, local, national, regional, and international levels. This symposium began with a half-day tutorial on Thursday, February 27 for those not yet acquainted with major initiatives such as the California legislature’s SB 1047 (the Safe and Secure Innovation for Frontier Artificial Intelligence Models Act), which Governor Newsom vetoed; the Biden Administration’s Executive Order on the Safe, Secure, & Trustworthy Development and Use of Artificial Intelligence; the European Union’s AI Act; and technical governance measures.

On Friday, February 28, a full day of speakers presented a range of perspectives on these initiatives and others, considering various types of governance tools (such as procurement policies and disclosure requirements) that regulators may deploy, and offering assessments of which are more and less likely to be effective in promoting artificial intelligence systems for the public good and ensuring safe and trustworthy development of such systems. Speakers also explored private ordering initiatives and the role of standards in achieving these important goals.

This symposium is funded by a grant from the MacArthur Foundationmacarthur foundation