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Code, Court & Constitution: Challenging Tech’s Monopoly on Influence

Code, Court & Constitution: Challenging Tech’s Monopoly on Influence There is a growing narrative that tech companies are facing a backlash from states around the world. Yet the duty of the state is to define the landscape in which tech operates. Tech regulation is, on the one hand, limiting innovative spaces; on the other, under-regulation is allowing innovators to code laws without any democratic accountability. This is particularly problematic in the age of AI, the development of which implicates multiple domains from bioethics to market dynamics. Naturally, concerns have emerged that technological innovation is pushing ever further into domains traditionally overseen by the state—from platforms that have greater power over speech than even courts to digital connectivity that is now subject to commercial dimensions. If a consensus is not evolved on a regulatory approach, then other authorities—from courts to bureaucracies—will step in. Speakers: Bibek Debroy, Chairman, Economic Advisory Council to the Prime Minister, India Brendan Carr, Commissioner, Federal Communications Commission, United States Bassant Hassib, Non-Resident Scholar, Middle East Institute, United States Stephanie Diepeveen, Senior Research Fellow, ODI, Netherlands Sunil Abraham, Director, Public Policy India - Data Economy and Emerging Tech, META, India Moderator: Caitríona Heinl, Executive Director, The Azure Forum for Contemporary Security Strategy, Ireland

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