Agenda

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We Robot 2018

We Robot is the annual gathering of academics, policy makers, roboticists, economists, ethicists, entrepreneurs, and lawyers who care about robots and the future of robot law and policy. The 2018 Conference will be held at Stanford Law School.

 

Friday, April 13
Paul Brest Hall, Munger Graduate Residence
Time Event
8:00 am Breakfast & Registration
8:30 am Welcome Remarks
8:45 am Confinement Companions: Can AI Address The Solitary Confinement Crisis?
Author: Francis X. Shen, University of Minnesota Law School; Harvard Law School and the Center for Law, Brain & Behavior at Massachusetts General Hospital; MacArthur Foundation Research Network on Law and Neuroscience
Discussant
: Kim Pate, Senate of Canada
9:45 am Break
10:15 am An Internet of Torts
Author: Rebecca Crootof, Yale Law School
Discussant
: Sonia K. Katyal, Berkeley Center for Law and Technology
11:15 am Lightning Round
Remedies for Robots
Author: Mark Lemley, Stanford Law School | Bryan Casey, CodeX, The Stanford Center for Legal Informatics
RoboTruckers: The Double Threat of AI for Low-Wage Work
Author(s): Karen Levy, Cornell University
Privacy Under the Hood: International and Domestic Data Protection Frameworks for Autonomous Vehicles
Authors: Chelsey Colbert, Fasken Martineau DuMoulin LLP
Anonymous Robot Speech
Author(s): Madeline Lamo, University of Washington School of Law | Ryan Calo, University of Washington School of Law
Discussants: Sue Glueck, Microsoft | F. Daniel Siciliano, Stanford Law School
12:15 pm Lunch

  • Informal networking
  • Ad hoc demos, informal networking, and small group discussions
1:45 pm (Dis)Placed Workers: A Study in the Disruptive Potential of Robotics and AI
Author: Madeleine Elish, Data & Society
The [Shapeless] Shape of Automation: Moments of Constructing Factory Robots in East Asia
Author: Ling-Fei Lin, Harvard University
Discussant
: F. Daniel Siciliano, Stanford Law School
2:45 pm Break
3:15 pm Should Robots Pay Taxes? Tax Policy in the Age of Automation
Author: Ryan Abbott, University of Surrey & UCLA | Bret Bogenschneider, University of Surrey
Discussant
: Robert J. Kovacev, Steptoe
4:15 pm Break
4:45 pm Explaining Autonomy: Risk Communications & Robotics
Author: Aaron Mannes, ISHPI Information Technologies
Discussant
: Laurel Riek, U.C. San Diego
5:45 pm Adjourn

 


 

Saturday, April 14
The Stanford Faculty Club
Time Event
8:00 am Breakfast & Registration
8:30 am Urban Robotics: Achieving Autonomy in Design and Regulation of Robots and Cities
Authors: Jesse Woo, Independent Researcher | Jan Whittington, University of Washington | Ronald Arkin, Georgia Institute of Technology
Robots in the Public Square: Regulation and the Changing Nature of Public Space
Author: Kristen Thomasen, University of Windsor
Discussant
: Woodrow Hartzog, Northeastern University School of Law
9:30 am Demo Breakouts (Session 1)
10:00 am Demo Breakouts (Session 2)
10:30 am Is Tricking A Robot Hacking?
Authors: Ryan Calo | Ivan Evtimov | Earlence Fernandes | David O’Hair | Tadayoshi Kohno – Tech Policy Lab, University of Washington
Discussant
: Ashkan Soltani, Former CTO of the Federal Trade Commission
11:30 am Demo Breakouts (Session 3)
12:00 pm Demo Breakouts (Session 4)
12:30 pm Lunch / Demos
1:15 pm When AIs Outperform Doctors: The dangers of a tort-induced over-reliance on machine learning and what (not) to do about it
Authors: Michael Froomkin, University of Miami School of Law | Ian Kerr, University of Ottawa | Joëlle Pineau, McGill University
Discussant
: David M. Studdert, Stanford Law School
2:15 pm Break
2:45 pm Revenge Against Robots
Author: Christina Mulligan, Brooklyn Law School
Discussant: Kate Darling, MIT Media Lab
3:45 pm Break
4:15 pm Everything is Obvious
Author: Ryan Abbott, University of Surrey and UCLA
Discussant: Lisa Ouellette, Stanford Law School
5:30 pm Adjourn

 


 

Optional Thursday Session, April 12*
The Stanford Faculty Club
Time Event
10:30 am Registration / Check-in
11:00 am Workshop 1: What Law & Policy Can Realistically Do (and not do)
Woodrow Hartzog, Northeastern University
Ryan Calo, University of Washington School of Law
Rebecca Crootof, Yale Law School
12:30 pm Lunch
1:15 pm Workshop 2: The Reality of Sensors, Algorithms, and Machine Learning
Bill Smart, Oregon State University
Cindy Grimm, Oregon State University
2:30 pm Break
2:45 pm Workshop 3: The Realities of the Market: economic considerations, incentives, taxes, and disruption
F. Daniel Siciliano, Stanford Law School
Robert J. Kovacev, Steptoe
4:00 pm Break
3:30 pm Breakout 1: AVs and Related Issues in Litigation/Law
Bryan Casey, CodeX, The Stanford Center for Legal Informatics | Andrew Selbst, Data & Society | Markus Maurer, Technische Universität Braunschweig
Breakout 2: Drones
Kristen Thomasen, University of Windsor |  Rebecca Crootof, Yale Law School
Breakout 3: Manipulative AI
Woodrow Hartzog, Northeastern University School of Law | F. Daniel Siciliano, Stanford Law School
5:00 pm Adjourn
5:45 pm Informal Cocktail Reception (email programs@law.stanford.edu for location)

*subject to change