Life in the Age of Artificial Intelligence

Rottingdean Whiteway Centre

Special Event

Life in the Age of Artificial Intelligence

Day Friday
Date21st February 2025
Time 19:30 - 21:30
Presenter Blay Whitby
Cost £12.00
Room Main Hall
Availability 46/50 Places
Login or Register to book your place on this event
Event Description


What has come to be called The Fourth Industrial Revolution is now well under way. Artificial Intelligence (AI) will bring widespread social and economic changes in the next two decades. There will be many benefits but we will have to adapt to the widespread use of this new technology. At the very least each of us will need to work out how deal with ‘deep fakes’, AI fraud, and chatbots taking jobs that used to be exclusively done by humans. Serious risks are already evident. 
For governments and regulators the challenges are even larger. So far very few provisions have been made to deal with the impacts of AI or to protect those who may be displaced, exploited, unemployed, or otherwise disadvantaged. We need to completely rethink employment and taxation models and consider legislative controls on the new ‘Information Barons’. Of course, any effective regulation will need to be world-wide. 
 

Presenter
Dr Blay Whitby is a philosopher and ethicist concerned with the social impact of new and emerging technologies. He is a leading researcher in the field and the author of many books, chapters and papers on the subject including “Do You Want a Robot Lover?”, “On Computable Morality”, “Reflections on Artificial Intelligence: The Legal, Moral and Ethical Dimensions” and “Artificial Intelligence, A Beginner’s Guide”.
Dr Whitby is a member of the Advisory Board of the All Party Parliamentary Group on AI. He is an ethics expert for the European Commission, a member of the Strategic Ethics Committee of BCS The Chartered Institute of IT and an ethical advisor to the Royal Academy of Engineering.
Widening public engagement in science through debate is important to him and he is a regular speaker in community settings as well as having participated in several very high impact science/art collaborations.
He currently lectures at The University of Sussex, Imperial College, Ada College, Brighton and Sussex Medical School and is a visiting professor at the Technical University of Vienna.
Dr Whitby is happy to be involved with and support new research projects, which would benefit from his expertise in ethics and the social effects of emerging technology.