The geopolitics of the internet and its implications for the governance of AI
The geopolitics of the internet and its implications for the governance of AI
There is no doubt that the world is very dependent on the Internet these days. If it wasn't obvious before, we certainly realised our dependency during the Covid-19 pandemic. Also, when the whole world piled onto the Internet in order to do anything during the lockdowns, it stayed up and running which is a huge testament to the foresight of the Internet pioneers in terms of its design and in built resilience and scalability. But the Internet has never been under such threat and its whole future as a globally interconnected system is in much doubt for many different reasons. In this talk we will explore the future of the Internet through the perspective of geopolitics and data governance. We will argue that through this lens we see at least four internets, maybe more, rather than just one interconnected ecosystem. We will explore what aspects of the governance of cyberspace we must protect the most in order for us to continue to use the technical infrastructure of the Internet that we all rely on to support cloud and data services, and how this is all playing out in the age of AI.
Additionally, the lecture will address the crucial topic of research integrity in the age of AI, exploring how academia can adapt to ensure ethical and responsible use of these powerful technologies and how they might affect education in general.
Association for Computing Machinery
Hall, Dame Wendy
11f7f8db-854c-4481-b1ae-721a51d8790c
5 December 2024
Hall, Dame Wendy
11f7f8db-854c-4481-b1ae-721a51d8790c
Hall, Dame Wendy
(2024)
The geopolitics of the internet and its implications for the governance of AI.
In SIGCSE Virtual 2024: Proceedings of the 2024 on ACM Virtual Global Computing Education Conference V. 1.
Association for Computing Machinery..
(doi:10.1145/3649165.3699861).
Record type:
Conference or Workshop Item
(Paper)
Abstract
There is no doubt that the world is very dependent on the Internet these days. If it wasn't obvious before, we certainly realised our dependency during the Covid-19 pandemic. Also, when the whole world piled onto the Internet in order to do anything during the lockdowns, it stayed up and running which is a huge testament to the foresight of the Internet pioneers in terms of its design and in built resilience and scalability. But the Internet has never been under such threat and its whole future as a globally interconnected system is in much doubt for many different reasons. In this talk we will explore the future of the Internet through the perspective of geopolitics and data governance. We will argue that through this lens we see at least four internets, maybe more, rather than just one interconnected ecosystem. We will explore what aspects of the governance of cyberspace we must protect the most in order for us to continue to use the technical infrastructure of the Internet that we all rely on to support cloud and data services, and how this is all playing out in the age of AI.
Additionally, the lecture will address the crucial topic of research integrity in the age of AI, exploring how academia can adapt to ensure ethical and responsible use of these powerful technologies and how they might affect education in general.
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Published date: 5 December 2024
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Keynote
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Local EPrints ID: 496922
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496922
PURE UUID: 255991a9-b25e-4d44-b9ea-ce461cf920d5
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Date deposited: 08 Jan 2025 12:50
Last modified: 10 Jan 2025 02:32
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