Description
🎙️Episode 3: Continued Dialogue with Salomé Lannier – AI-Based Detection of Human Exploitation
We had so much to talk about that our conversation had to be split in two episodes 🫶
What you will find in this episode:
👩🎓AI Act & DSA: Legal Boundaries and Responsibilities. The AI Act sets regulatory limits for artificial intelligence, while the Digital Services Act ensures platforms are accountable for online content and its societal impacts.
Interculturality: Sex Work vs Human Trafficking. Distinguishing sex work from trafficking requires precise legal definitions and sensitivity to cultural contexts.
👩💻GDPR, AI Act & Online Content. GDPR and the AI Act together protect personal data and regulate AI-driven systems on digital platforms.
Public-Private Collaboration. Effective legal protection against exploitation demands enhanced cooperation between public and private sectors.
⛔Victim Treatment: Non-Punishment & Consent. Upholding the principle of non-punishment and recognising consent complexities are essential for victim-centred justice.
Timeline
Legal perspectives follow-up
0:34 - 1:35 The limitation of the AI Act - the DSA as addressing the consequences.
1:41 - 2:55 Interculturality - how sex work and human trafficking differ.
3:07 - 4:11 Liability and decisions taken by the deployer.
4:35 - 8:09 The GDPR and AI Act and the multiple purposes in the scope of online content - the legal framework in the context of the online platforms.
8:20 - 11:13 The question of implementing more protection and collaboration between public-private actors ?
11:41 - 13:28 The treatment of victims - principle of non punishment for human trafficking victims & consent.
Technical perspectives
13:56 - 18:31 The technical issues - human over the loop - research transparency.
18:32 - 21:52 The “positioning” concept.
21:53 - 24:52 Remediation of discrimination, biases - “the women question”.
25: 00 - 28:58 Ex post control over the AI system - overblocking/underblocking concepts.
29:18 - 32:51 Explainability of AI system - automated decisions in this context of human exploitation - right of explainability.
33:07 - 36:00 Legal remedy/technical remedy if the AI is not high risk - deep fakes.
36:03 - 39:00 Implementing collaboration & ethics to address those issues - digital literacy.
Signature questions
39:57 - 41:29 What female figures inspired your research?
41: 38 - 42:45 What key advice would you give to women exploring the world of AI and Law?
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