Speaker: Jakub Harašta, Masaryk University, Brno, Faculty of Law, Institute of Law and Technology
Time: Thursday, 17 February 2022, 10:00 AM CET
Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning are concepts that influence and likely will influence how we search for legal information. However, the way lawyers retrieve and consume information is rigged with assumptions on what is relevant and useful. Additionally, users might have individual or group (judges, attorneys, students) preferences. How to present these data to users? How to communicate these assumptions? Where do they come from? And is it necessary to be completely transparent?
Registration: https://forms.gle/37Yf9A8L48YuZzms7
The seminar will be broadcasted via Zoom application. Participation is subject to prior registration. The Zoom link of the event will be sent to registered participants via email.
Dr Jakub Harašta is an assistant professor at the Institute of Law and Technology, Faculty of Law, Masaryk University. His research focuses on cybersecurity and legal informatics. He graduated in law (master and doctoral degrees) and security studies (master degree). He was visiting research fellow at Minerva Center for the Rule of Law under extreme conditions (University of Haifa, 2015) and visiting postdoctoral fellow at the Center for Cyber Law & Policy (University of Haifa, 2018). His short-term research stays include Exeter Law School (UK), NATO Cooperative Cyber Defence Centre of Excellence (Estonia), and Max-Planck-Institut zur Erforschung von Gemeinschaftsgütern (Germany).
MILAB: https://mi.nemzetilabor.hu/
CSS (TK) in MILAB: https://milab.tk.hu/en
The event was supported by the Ministry of Innovation and Technology NRDI Office within the framework of the FK_21 Young Researcher Excellence Program (138965) and the Artificial Intelligence National Laboratory Program.