Faculty Associate Arvind Narayanan contends that Moravec's paradox is more a statement of AI technologists' values than of fact.
Quantum sensing technologies test existing privacy frameworks severely because they bypass the physical boundaries—walls, distance, the opacity of the human body—on which existing doctrine depends.
Join the Berkman Klein Center for a fireside chat and Q&A with Julie Brill, one of the world’s foremost thought leaders on ...
Researchers from Harvard’s Insight and Interaction Lab built an interpretability dashboard that shows a chatbot’s internal assumptions about a user — such as age, gender, class, and race — making ...
In an interview with The Harvard Gazette, Faculty Co-Director Rebecca Tushnet explains the legal difficulties that AI ...
ByteDance has struck a deal with a group of non-Chinese investors to loosen TikTok's ties to China, alleviating national ...
In Slate, he explains why a Mercator projection makes Greenland look far larger than it is, and why this matters. "While the choice of map method sounds like a mathematical abstraction, it literally ...
In a solo-authored report for OONI, Maria Xynou documents the Ugandan Communications Commission's internet shutdown and subsequent social media blocks.
The Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University is pleased to welcome Isabella Roden as its new ...