We explain in coffee time the critical privacy issues that can arise from artificial intelligence (AI) systems.
Paola Pisano, the former Italian minister of innovation covers the challenges and opportunities of the future of artificial intelligence.
The AI policy is the backbone of a compliance program on artificial intelligence, otherwise no regulatory framework and proper usage of AI can occur.
The main terms of the EU AI Act easily explained during the time necessary to drink a coffee by Giulio Coraggio of DLA Piper.
The Italian privacy authority changed its approach on the retention of metadata of employees' emails, but the new position might not be a solution for companies that shall perform substantial activities to comply.
The Italian gambling authority held an online session with the current license holders where it clarified some of the changes that will be introduced with the new online gaming license regime.
The AI Act is European Union's first piece of legislation on the use of artificial intelligence, and Giulio Coraggio, Location Head of Intellectual Property & Technology at law firm DLA Piper, discusses over coffee time what it provides for and how companies should prepare to comply with it.
The guidelines of the EDPS on artificial intelligence (AI) and privacy are addressed to public entities, but will be relevant also for private entities.
AI psychologists seem to be the unveil new opportunities as well as future challenges, also from a legal standpoint, and we discussed the topic with Reina Balestrello of Unobravo.
The Italian Privacy Authority, the Garante, released an information note with detailed guidelines on how to defend personal data published online by public and private entities from web scraping as part of the training of artificial intelligence (AI) systems.
