What did the Data Governance Working Group work on in 2022?
Global Partnership on AI (GPAI) is a multidisciplinary initiative, joining together experts from various fields to foster international cooperation in responsibly developing all things AI in theory and practice.
Data Governance Working Group (DGWG) is one of the four groups of experts, working for sustainable development of AI in the scope of GPAI.
In 2022, the DGWG worked on three projects: enabling data sharing for social benefit through data trusts, privacy enhancing technology and our most prominent project of 2022, advancing research and practice on data justice.
The result of the DGWG research on data justice are multiple resources for theory and practice alike. In the beginning of 2022, we made available the repository of data justice studies and a comprehensive literature review. On the basis of that, we authored guides regarding data justice for policymakers, developers and impacted communities as well as primers data and social and economic justice, respectively.
The expert reports from 2022 as well as 2021 and 2020 are available on the GPAI website.
The Grand Board of the European Union Intellectual Property Office (EUIPO) finally ruled that the figurative sign ‘COVIDIOT’ cannot be registered as an EU trademark.
The 4th Open Knowledge Day took place on Tuesday 17 October 2023, with an accompanying workshop on 18 October 2023. This year it was organised by the Open Data and Intellectual Property Institute (ODIPI) and supported by Knowledge Rights 21 (KR21).
We invite you to the fourth Open Knowledge Day and the workshop, which will take place this year within the framework of the programme and with the support of Knowledge Rights 21. The event will bring together experts from different European countries to discuss two topics: the first part will deal with the legal basis for data analytics, which is a key part of machine learning and related artificial intelligence, and the general exception for research. In the second part, open science in theory and practice will be presented both in Slovenia and in some Western Balkan countries. Representatives of research and educational institutions from Slovenia and the Western Balkan countries, as well as interested members of the public, are invited to attend.
Dr. Maja Bogataj Jančič, a renowned expert in copyright law, has joined the Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University, where she will serve as an affiliate researcher for the next two years.