AI & the Law - Ethics - Deep Fakes & Legislation

Monday, July 22 - Wednesday, July 24, 2024

The Defining Event: The Future of Entertainment, Media & Technology

A Virtual Event • Registration is Free - An Expected Audience of 12,000

• Speakers Note: Some Sessions will be Taped Prior to the Event - Please check with your moderator


Registration is Free and Now Open - Click Here


The Evening Keynote Roundtables

Monday, July 22nd, 2024

9:00 PM - 9:50 PM - Eastern Time Zone

Session I:

AI and Safety: Governance and Restraint vs. Industry Self-Regulation

AI didn’t arrive in the past 18 months.  For nearly twenty years, AI has steadily become a technological societal force, serving as a backbone to the Medical Imaging community, directing traffic on the internet and regulating electrical power grids across the country and making possible self-driving cars. However, with the arrival of Generative AI and the anticipation of AGI, Artificial General Intelligence, and massive surge in technology investment and company valuations, there is deep concern that the exuberance of discovery will lead to an unwelcome future.  We welcome this conversation.

Speakers:

Richard Kerris, General Manager, Media and Entertainment, NVIDIA

Dr. Rumman Chowdhury, United States Science Envoy, Artificial Intelligence, CEO and co-Founder, Humane Intelligence

Mary Hamilton, Managing Director, Technology Innovation, Americas, Accenture

Dan Hendrycks, Director, Center for AI Safety

Dr. Megan Ma, Associate Director, CodeX and Law, Science, Technology Program, Stanford Law School, Moderator

Speaker Bios and Session Information - Click Here


9:00 PM - 9:50 PM - Eastern Time Zone

Session II:

The Hollywood Trajectory: The Generative AI Video Timeline: 2023 – 2024 – 2025 – 2026

How fast will AI take over Hollywood? That’s the question. After YouTube; After VFX and the Nightmare of Sequels, After Netflix, Amazon and cord cutting; Remember, Napster Killed the Music Industry!! What’s next? Is AI the Machine that’s going to “Eat Hollywood.” We are already beginning to understand the impact of AI on Screenwriting, AI and Virtual Charters and AI’s impact on VFX. Video Editing is clearly in the eye of the AI storm and the role of extras not to mention complicated backgrounds that will magically appear through the power of AI. In this session, we will speculate on the impact of AI on Hollywood and try to understand the impact and growth of “The AI Blob.” How soon will entire movies, TV shows and Ads being fully produced by a giant AI. 2026? 2028? What will Hollywood look like in 2030?

Speakers:

Paul Trillo, Artist, Writer, and Director

Andy Beach, CTO, Media & Entertainment Worldwide, Microsoft

Renard T. Jenkins, President, i2a2 LLC, President, SMPTE

Jen Hollingsworth, Chief Commercial Officer (CCO), Flawless AI

Phillip Fury, Immersive Technology Innovator and Advisor

Peter Csathy, Chairman, Creative Media, Moderator

Speaker Bios and Session Information - Click Here

The Evening Keynote Roundtables

Tuesday, July 23rd, 2024

8:00 PM - 8:50 PM - Eastern Time Zone

Session II:

AI and the Crisis of Creative Rights and Disinformation: Deep Fakes, Ethics and the Law
Even with the successful resolution of the Entertainment industry “Guilds” strike of 2023, there remains an ongoing fear that "artificial intelligence poses an existential threat to creative professions." The core AI issue sparking debate in Hollywood is not only based on compensation and creative control production. Deep fake technology in particular has raised concern about potential harmful uses, such as political disinformation, revenge porn, and misuse of intellectual property. Concerns about disinformation are particularly high in an election year. At the same time, many “creatives” tout the game changing benefits this technology can bring to artistic and other endeavors, such as educational opportunities, enhanced freedom of expression and reduced barriers to entry. This panel will discuss these competing concerns and whether existing legal frameworks, such as right of publicity, copyright, and existing regulations, are sufficient to address this powerful technology.

Speakers:
Duncan Crabtree-Ireland,
National Executive Director and Chief Negotiator, SAG-AFTRA
Ilke Demir,
Sr. Staff Research Scientist, Intel Labs
Ellen L. Weintraub,
Commissioner, Federal Election Commission

Rob Rosenberg, principal, Telluride Legal Strategies; former EVP & General Counsel, Showtime Networks
Lisa Oratz,
Senior Counsel, Perkins Coie, Moderator

Speaker Bios and Session Information - Click Here

Wednesday, July 24th, 2024

8:00 PM - 8:50 PM - Eastern Time Zone

Session I:

A Meditation on Bad Hollywood: A Warning from the Creative Community – “Is the Future Synthetic Entertainment
While the “Strikes” of 2023 may have been settled, with a well negotiated and robust consideration of all things AI, nevertheless, even with the AI guardrails in place, the feeling among creatives and for good reason, continues as the “unknown impact” of AI remains front and center in our industry and for the future of creativity and entertainment. Reflecting on this past year’s “Writers’ and SAG-AFTRA Strike,” Justine Bateman, was one among many in Hollywood expressing concern for our coming “Synthetic Entertainment Future.” To quote from her Newsweek article, Bateman was passionate and direct, “AI stands for Artificial Intelligence, but I refer to it as "Automatic Imitation." And as Andy Weir, author of "The Martian," has said, "before my life is over—my profession will effectively disappear.” In this session, we will continue the conversation concerning “All-Things AI,” the conversation that likely will never end.

Speakers:

Danielle Van Lier, former,Senior Assistant General Counsel, Contracts & Compliance, SAG-AFTRA, Moderator

Charlie Fink, Consultant, Forbes Columnist, “This Week in XR Podcast”

Marie Kelly, National Executive Director and Chief Negotiator, ACTRA Alliance of Canadian Cinema, Television and Radio Artists

Bryn Mooser, CEO, XTR

Caleb Ward, CEO/Artist, Curious Refuge

Speaker Bios and Session Information - Click Here


9:00 PM - 9:50 PM - Eastern Time Zone

AI-Powered Business Models for Media and Entertainment: Opportunities and Investment Strategies
The market caps of Hollywood studios and the “Magnificent Seven” (Alphabet/Google, Amazon, Apple, Meta, Microsoft, Nvidia and Tesla) are a stark tale of two cities. In 1994, the economic power of Hollywood and Tech were more or less equal. Today, the big tech 7 are worth $11.6 trillion, while the seven largest studios clock in under $400 billion— 3.45% the market value of their counterparts. AI represents a chance for M&E to harness tech to add revenue stream, decrease costs and force multiply efficiencies. This panel will present some specific examples how A&I can supercharge M&E ROI and growth.

Speakers:

Guy Gadney, CEO, Charisma.ai

Marcie Jastrow, Advisor, Shiba Inu

Virl Hill, Digital Media Leader, Former, Head of Worldwide Business Development & Strategy, Media & Entertainment, Microsoft

Matt Edelman, President and Chief Commercial Officer, Super League

Dan Goman, CEO, Ateliere Creative Technologies

Seth Shapiro, Two-time Emmy winner, Partner, Alpha Transform Holdings, Moderator

Speaker Bios and Session Information - Click Here


The Complete Conference Agenda (The Daytime Events)

Tuesday, July 23rd, 2024

Noon – 12:50 PM - Eastern Time Zone

Session II:

Session Hosted by SAG-AFTRA

The Clones Have Arrived! What You Need to Know

In the entertainment industry, technology should be the tool, not the star. In 2023, SAG-AFTRA and WGA battled AI in an historic dual-strike that resulted in groundbreaking protections. But the fight is far from over as Capitol Hill and state houses across the country grapple with what's coming. What protections has SAG-AFTRA achieved in its collective bargaining agreements? What do existing state laws say? What is coming in the states? What is being proposed by the federal government?

Speakers:

Jessica Johnson, National Director of Entertainment Contracts, SAG-AFTRA
Doug Mirell, Partner, Greenberg Glusker Fields Claman & Machtinger LLP
Sue-Anne Morrow, National Director of Contract Strategic Initiatives & Podcasts, SAG-AFTRA

Additional speakers to be announced

Speaker Bios and Session Information - Click Here


1 PM – 1:50 PM - Eastern Time Zone

Session I:

As Johnny Rotten Might Say: AI Music – Bollocks Sí or Bollocks No? 

Some say, AI is different. This technology may be black magic and maybe they’re right. But what about Sampling and Looping, Sequencers, Drum Machines and Beat Makers, Software synths and the Moog. How about the first time you became aware of the Wah Wah pedal? Does the music of Hendrix, Clapton or Zappa come to mind? The magical world of “Music and Technology” has enabled and enhanced the greatest of our popular musicians and producers for more than half a century. What is the role of the “Recorder Producer?” What about “The Wall of Sound?” What are the Beatles without George Martin, the master of “Audio Wizardry!” What would Johnny Rotten say about “Music and AI.” Let’s discuss.

Speakers:

Gerald Casale, Artist, Musician, founding Member, DEVO

Daniel Rowland, Music Producer, Head of Strategy, LANDR Audio

Jessica Powell, CEO, Audioshake

Dustin Blank,  Head of Partnerships, ElevenLabs

Thomas Sachson, General Manager, Dropness LLC; former, Head of Monetization and Strategic Partnerships, Sony Music Immersive Studio

Steve R. Masur, Partner, Raines Feldman Littrell LLP, Moderator

Speaker Bios and Session Information - Click Here


Session III:

The High Profile AI Start-up – Searching for Unicorns 

The names of the “High-Flying” AI Start-ups are now nearly as well-known as Google, Meta, Microsoft and Amazon. There’s OpenAI, Anthropic, Inflection AI, Cohere, Mistral AI, Hugging Face, Scale AI and Databricks to name a few. And all of these AI names are valued in the Billions. And that doesn’t count the fifty other companies whose AI products we are now all using and purchasing. What does this mean for the future of tech investments, the coming IPOs and tech valuations in general. Is AI leading a boom in the technology marketplace, the economy as a whole. How many will be busts? What do all these potential “Unicorns” mean?

Speakers:

Kirthiga Reddy, Co-founder & CEO, Virtualness, Moderator

Tara Tan, Managing Partner, Strange Ventures

Sharad Devarajan, Adjunct Professor, Media & Technology, Columbia Business School

David Higley, Partner, Global Media & Technology Group, Perella Weinberg

Bobby Napiltonia, Innovative Silicon Valley Exec., Okera, Salesforce, Twilio, BEA

Speaker Bios and Session Information - Click Here


2 PM – 2:50 PM - Eastern Time Zone

Session II:

AI and Identity Theft - A Taylor Swift Law – The Deep Fake Dilemma

“Deep Fakes” are not only a theft of property rights and a concern of Musicians and Hollywood personalities, bad-actors are scheming new, inventive and technologically bizarre ways to invade our privacy, our computer data and ultimately our electronic wallets. This is not a false alarm. While a “Taylor Swift Law” is needed to protect the personage of a pop star, it may be even more important to secure the personal electronic rights of everyday citizens. Recently in Hong Kong, a “Deep Fake” scheme successfully defrauded an investment company of $25 Million in a fraudulent Zoom call with visual impersonators representing colleagues. That Zoom call might have been you and a “Deep Faked” family member. 

Speakers:

Remington Scott, Founder, CEO and Chief Architect, Hyperreal® Inc., VFX, THE LORD OF THE RINGS: THE TWO TOWERS

Caroline Giegerich, Innovation Consultant, TEDx Speaker, Daily Marauder

Virginie Berger, Chief Business Development & Rights Officer, MatchTune

Greg Young, Vice President for Cybersecurity, Trend Micro

Will Kreth, CEO, HAND (Human & Digital), Moderator

Speaker Bios and Session Information - Click Here

Session IV:

The AI Start-Up Dream Team: Strategies for Success: Unique Founders, PhDs, Genius Advisors, Venture Board

What are the difference makers. Where are the forks in the road, the decisive decisions taken by the ultimate winners and the 80% of start-ups who drift off and ultimately fade away. Facebook was not the first, but was by far the greatest of the Social Networks to enter the fray. Since all serious start-ups have brilliant and determined founders, wise and experienced advisors and investors, what separates that one shooting star from the group? Sometimes changing the world begins at a corner store serving a niche market in the community, like being a quality bookstore in a mall of Superstores or a seaside shack serving an upscale boating community and the opportunity reveals itself. But often, targeting a narrow domain, an underserved market, a foundational technology serving a unique need will provide the pathway to success.

Speakers:

Curt Doty, Founder, RealmIQ, Moderator

DMA Anderson, Founder and CEO, Korgi

Jeremy Toeman, Founder and CEO, AugX Labs

Mitchell Posada, Co-Founder, 3TGTM

Huipin Zhang, CEO & Founder, Visla, Zoom Founding Team

Speaker Bios and Session Information - Click Here


3 PM – 3:50 PM - Eastern Time Zone

Session IV:

Predictive Hollywood Analytics and Strategy: The Barbi vs. Oppenheimer Predictive Data Breakdown

William Goldman famously stated, “Nobody knows anything,” in describing the unpredictability and decision making in the film industry. Despite this assertion, a “Predictive Analytics” industry has emerged that underpins much of Hollywood decision making today. AI analytics are employed in script development, including character and thematic choices, deep dives into casting as well as audience preferences underpinning each option. While it is hard to say if the AI process was at the core of the massive success of “Barbi” or the award winning “Oppenheimer,” a breakdown of that development and production process would certainly make for an interesting discussion.

Speakers:

Tobias Queisser, Co-founder & CEO, Cinelytic

Kartik Hosanagar, CEO, Jumpcut, Co-Director, Wharton School AI & Analytics

Marc Karzen, CEO / Strategist, RelishMix, Moderator

Additional Speakers to be announced

Speaker Bios and Session Information - Click Here


4 PM – 4:40 PM - Eastern Time Zone

Session II:

AI Music Monetization: DeepMind’s Dreamtrack, The Grimes AI  Strategy: Let’s Go 50-50%

There’s no way to slow down the explosion of AI created music. It’s here, it’s now and everyone, young and old have become AI Sound Engineers by the hundreds of thousands.  So as the ocean of new music arrives, the idea of “AI Music & Monetization” has now become front and center. For example, Google’s DeepMind recently unveiled DreamTrack, an AI system allowing customizable music generation via text prompts. Their partnership with the music label EMI hints at future platforms streamlining rights-cleared AI music tailored to user taste. Such tools could enable independent musicians, creative agencies, and brands to license bespoke soundtracks on-demand. Along the same lines, the famous musician Grimes is exploring equally disruptive models, granting fans collective ownership in her AI-assisted compositions through NFTs and decentralization. It’s only the start, but with music AI software getting better and better, the market is ripe for legal monetization strategies to emerge.

Speakers:

Daouda Leonard, founder and CEO, CreateSafe

Anthony Ramirez, Partner, Technology Transactions Group, Morrison Foerster

Alex Mitchell, CEO, Boomy

Karen Allen, CEO & Co-Founder, Infinite Album

Joanna Popper, Former Chief Metaverse Officer, CAA, Moderator

Speaker Bios and Session Information - Click Here


Session III:

AI & the Creative Community – Representing the Interest of Actors - Writers - Producers - Guild Members

While the Hollywood strikes last year may now be old news, the concerns of the Guild membership, the writers and actors are far from settled. After all, creative concerns cannot always be resolved through arbitration and legal settlement. The underlying issues of Artificial Intelligence, from Deep Fakes, Virtual Humans and the ultimate ability of the AI to reason, think and author creative works is far from settled fact. Who among us can say what the future might hold. For those of you who have tried AI or perhaps have even become “Expert” in AI application, you are aware of the problems it may present. AI can as easily violate copyright of everything from image to story to voice as it can enhance the creativity of the most sophisticated artist. This our world to explore.

Speakers:

Chris McGuire, Comedy Showrunner: Martha & Snoop, The Soup, Comedy Central Roasts

Schuyler (Sky) M. Moore, Partner, Greenberg Glusker
Dan Neely, Co-Founder and CEO of Vermillio

Oz Krakowski, Chief Business Development Officer, Deepdub

Tess Rafferty, TV Writer, Author, Columnist (The Soup, Martha & Snoop’s Potluck Dinner Party)

Catherine Clinch, Veteran TV Writer, Hunter, Jake & the Fat Man, Love Boat, Hart to Hart, Moderator

Speaker Bios and Session Information - Click Here


5:00 PM – 5:50 PM - Eastern Time Zone

Session I:

The Elvis Act: The Tennessee Deep Fake 2024 Law

Is this the first of many, a prelude to a “Federal Law” or an interesting step to secure the “Individual Rights in the face of Deep Fakes,” serving as a bellwether for future legislation, but ultimately not the final word on the subject. Tennessee’s “Ensuring Likeness Voice and Image Security (ELVIS) Act” passed earlier by their state legislature this year and exclusively limited to Tennessee residents is directed specifically to the issues of “Deep Fakes” and to the protection of Recording Artists and others impacted by “Voice Cloning” and other AI technologies. In this session, our speakers will address the specifics of “The Elvis Act,” with the thought that this piece of legislation is likely a “Canary in a Coal Mine,” one of the first legislative steps that may indicate of how public and political sympathies could be harbingers of AI legislation and legal decisions coming in the future.

Speakers:

Christopher Kenneally, Award-Winning Podcast Host/Producer, Moderator

Edward Klaris, Managing Partner, Klaris Law 

Angela L. Dunning, Partner, Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLP

Kevin J. Greene, John J. Schumacher Chair, Professor of Law, Southwestern Law School

David C. Johnson, Partner, Lippes Mathias LLP

Speaker Bios and Session Information - Click Here


Wednesday, July 24th, 2024

Noon – 12:50 PM - Eastern Time Zone

Session I:

AI the Controversy: Innovation & Transformation vs. Threat to the Future

The impact of AI on all industry sectors, from Entertainment and Communications to Law and Manufacturing is ongoing and clearly transformational. For those of you who have tried AI or perhaps have even become “Expert” in AI application, you are well aware of its significant impact and the problems it may present. While job loss may be balanced by new and creative industry innovation, there is no question that AI presents a future of ethical and technological unknowns and question marks.

Speakers:

Ken Hertz, Senior Partner, Hertz Lichtenstein & Young LLP

Lauren Fried, Partner, Loeb & Loeb, LLP

Paul Lekas, Senior Vice President, Global Public Policy, Software & Information Industry Association (SIIA)

Silke Meixner, Digital Customer Experience Strategy, ZS Associates

Ghen Laraya Long, Esq., Entertainment & Technology Attorney, Moderator

Speaker Bios and Session Information - Click Here

Session III:

“Is AI Music the Piracy Machine? As Brian May has Stated, “It’s Gonna Get Very Weird Very Quick”

Let's take an AI Music test. Google “Best in AI Music Deep Fakes” and you will be taken on an amazing tour of “Music Imposters,” including “Deep Fakes” of Britney Spears, Frank Sinatra singing obscene Rap Lyrics; the infamous Drake/The Weeknd, “Heart on My Sleeve” having become a massive hit in a few days and Freddie Mercury singing "All I Want for Christmas,” a “Perfect Clone” of a Queen performance. And the technology behind AI song generators are becoming dangerously professional. It’s no wonder that Brian May, Queen’s lead guitarist and song writer is quoted having said, “It’s Gonna Get Very Weird Very Quick.” Music is always the artform first impacted by the combination of technology and the Internet because it does not require extensive bandwidth. In this session we bring together some of the best in the music business.

Speakers:

David Hughes, Strategic Music Industry Consultant, former CTO, RIAA, VP Strategy, Sony Music, Moderator

Chris Horton, SVP Strategic Technology, Universal Music Group’s (UMG)

BT, Producer, Composer, Technologist, Soundlab.AI

Ian C. Ballon, Co-Chair, Global Intellectual Property & Technology Practice, Greenberg Traurig LLP

Additional speakers to be announced

Speaker Bios and Session Information - Click Here


1 PM – 1:50 PM - Eastern Time Zone

Session I:

AI Music and Creatives: A Relationship of Abundance and Trepidation

For the musician, solo artist, producer or A&R executive, the arrival in all its glory of “AI technology” is akin to the second coming of Napster. Napster arrived in 1999 and within a year or so effectively wiped out the “Record Industry” as it was then fashioned. And it has taken a couple of generations of musicians and technology to assemble a new and “more or less” thriving industry. Today, there is a massive listening audience, well designed and music friendly internet and mobile platforms, year-round and flourishing “Live Performance” opportunities and tons of “Merch.” And into this mix has arrived AI, the technology “Superpower” that makes “Synths” and "Drum Kits” look primitive. In this roundtable of “Creatives” we will explore our hesitancy to embrace AI, come clean in discussing the obvious dangers of copyright and “Deep Fake” while also grappling with the “Power of AI” as a “Creativity Tool.”

Speakers:

Eímear Noone, Award Winning, Composer, Conductor and Producer

Phil Quist, Music & Emerging Tech Agent, Creative Artists Agency (CAA)

Diaa El All, co-founder and CEO, Soundful

Ted Cohen, Managing Partner, TAG Strategic

Dr. Martin Clancy, Musician, Academic & founding Chair, IEEE Global AI ethics Arts Committee, Moderator

Speaker Bios and Session Information - Click Here


Session II:

Monetizing Immersive Hollywood, Music & Sports = AI + XR + Live Events + Metaverse

Global brands, social engagement, live events, immersive experiences, cross platform strategies; this is the electronic frontier of the future, where growth and commerce converge. It’s hard not to get excited by the next generation of platform and technological convergence. In this session we will analyze the landscape and attempt to define the ground rules. Enhanced brand loyalty, content innovation and better product are prerequisites for “Monetizing the Consumer Relationship.” The super competitive film/video, sports, Web3, and social media markets are in play 24/7. And it’s about execution & innovation of live events, the cinematic or video experience and the AI and XR investment that matters. But finally, it’s creativity, the “It Factor” which makes the difference.

Speakers:

Justin Hochberg, CEO, Virtual Brand Group, "Barbi AI on Roblox"

Ty Roberts, CEO, FanTracks CEO, Former CTO, Universal Music Group

Kobi Wu, CEO, Cache AI

Doug Scott, Co-Founder, Subnation

Travis Cloyd, CEO, WorldwideXR and VP of CMG (Celebrity Management Group), Moderator

Speaker Bios and Session Information - Click Here


2 PM – 2:50 PM - Eastern Time Zone

Session I:

AI & The Hollywood Writer & Director: Man-Made/Machine Made - Screenwriter vs. The Machine

Let’s see what the expert say. In this session of professional Hollywood screenwriters, we will breakdown the AI Screenwriting process. Our experts, all of whom are familiar with the best in AI Writing software, so that hopefully, will guarantee that the machine-made will be given a fighting chance. Compare and contrast. Let’s start out with a concept, “Create a Series of Prompts.” The AI is generally helpful in “Creating a first page, first breakdown of characters, first explanation of the arc. But what comes next? Can our experts “Prompt” the AI to approach the idea of “Storytelling?” What about “Human Emotion.” Is the professional writer wasting time “Prompting Deep Thoughts” with a robot with limited imagination. Perhaps not. Perhaps the AI is stimulating our “Writer’s Roundtable.” What is the state of the art in “Professional” AI screenwriting.

Speakers:

Mark Goffman, Writer/Producer, The Umbrella Academy, Bull, Limitless

Catherine Clinch, Veteran TV Writer, Hunter, Jake & the Fat Man, Love Boat, Hart to Hart

Mike Gioia, Co-Founder, Pickaxe

Frank Deese, Associate Professor, Screenwriting, School of Film & Animation, Rochester Institute of Technology

Christian Cantrell, Writer, Former VP of Product, Stability AI

Monica Landers, Founder & CEO, StoryFit, Moderator

Speaker Bios and Session Information - Click Here

3 PM – 3:50 PM - Eastern Time Zone

Session III:

The State of Generative AI Law: The Precedents – The Cases Currently in Progress

The illustrious history of copyright infringement lawsuits are filled with fascinating results. Most recently, the Supreme Court ruled that Andy Warhol infringed on photographer Lynn Goldsmith's copyright when he created a series of his famous silk screen images based on a photograph Goldsmith shot of the late musician Prince in 1981. So it is with great interest that the “AI Training Data” lawsuits make their way through the courts, The NY Times vs. OpenAI and Microsoft; Getty Images against Stability AI; a Class Action lawsuit filed against Stability AI, Midjourney and DeviantArt; a Programmers’ Class Action against Github among others. In this session, discuss status of “Copyright Law.”

Speakers:

Moiya McTier, Senior Advisor, Human Artistry Campaign

Chad Hummel, Fellow of the American College of Trial Lawyers, Principal Owner, Law Offices of Chad Hummel

Peter Csathy, Chairman, Creative Media, Moderator

Speaker Bios and Session Information - Click Here


4 PM – 4:50 PM - Eastern Time Zone

Session II:

The Legal Implications of Chatbots & Virtual Human Discussion

As chatbots and virtual humans become increasingly integrated into our daily lives, a complex web of legal implications arise. In this session, we will explore the legal considerations surrounding the development, deployment, and interaction with these AI-powered entities. Our panel will delve into topics such as data privacy, intellectual property, liability for AI-generated content, and the ethical consequences of human-AI interaction. While our current legal landscape may be more focused on customer service and retail advice, the future of human to virtual human interaction suggests an increasingly complex world of personal dependance, relationship in the form of AI girl and boyfriends, personal healthcare advice beyond “WebMD” and Virtual Humans providing psychological care. In time, complex Virtual Human services will be commonplace, and its legal implications will be exceedingly interesting.

Speakers:

Amy Gajda, Jeffrey D. Forchelli Professor of Law, Brooklyn Law School

Julie Krosnicki, Legal Director, IP & Product, Reddit

Lydia Ansari, Principal Corporate Counsel, Microsoft

Tre Lovell, Principal, The Lovell Firm

Meeka Bondy, Senior Counsel, Technology Transactions & Privacy Group and Co-Chair, Film and TV Group, Perkins Coie LLP. Moderator

Speaker Bios and Session Information - Click Here

To View By Track - Click Here

The Complete Agenda - Click Here

The Evening Keynotes - Click Here

 I. Track One: AI: Artists of the 21st Century

II. Track Two: Virtual Humans and Robotics

III. Track Three: AI and Hollywood Production

IV. Track Four: AI and Music: Artists vs. Tech

V. Track Five: AI & Threats, Bias & Rights

VI: Track Six: AI Fashion & Design


To View By Day - In Eastern Time Zone

I. The Evening Keynotes, July 22nd - 24th

II. Tuesday, July 23rd - Noon - 5 PM

III. Wednesday, July 24th - Noon - 5 PM

IV. Thursday, July 25th - Noon - 5 PM

Speaker Submission: If you wish to submit a speaker - email - Click Submission - indicating session(s) you would like to be considered - indicating day, time, and session name. We request that you include a bio of the speaker and a backgrounder of the company.


Sponsoring Organizations - Various Options including hosting online "Content Spaces" during this Virtual Summit. "Content Spaces" will have full Zoom Room - Demo capability along with other interactive and display features. Please complete the form for further information - Click Here

To View By Track - Click Here

The Complete Agenda - Click Here

The Evening Keynotes - Click Here

 I. Track One: AI: Artists of the 21st Century

II. Track Two: Virtual Humans and Robotics

III. Track Three: AI and Hollywood Production

IV. Track Four: AI and Music: Artists vs. Tech

V. Track Five: AI & Threats, Bias & Rights

VI: Track Six: AI Fashion & Design


To View By Day - In Eastern Time Zone

I. The Evening Keynotes, July 22nd - 24th

II. Tuesday, July 23rd - Noon - 5 PM

III. Wednesday, July 24th - Noon - 5 PM

IV. Thursday, July 25th - Noon - 5 PM


To View By Track - Click Here

The Evening Keynotes - Click Here

The Complete Agenda - Click Here

 I. Track One: AI: Artists of the 21st Century

II. Track Two: Virtual Humans & Robotics

III. Track Three: AI and Hollywood

IV. Track Four: AI Music &Tech

V. Track Five: AI & Threats, Bias & Rights

VI: Track Six: AI Fashion & Design


To View By Day - In Eastern Time Zone

I. The Evening Keynotes, July 22nd - 24th

II. Tuesday, July 23rd - Noon - 5 PM

III. Wednesday, July 24th - Noon - 5 PM

IV. Thursday, July 25th - Noon - 5 PM


To View By Track - Click Here

The Evening Keynotes - Click Here

The Complete Agenda - Click Here

 I. Track One: AI: Artists of the 21st Century

II. Track Two: Virtual Humans & Robotics

III. Track Three: AI and Hollywood

IV. Track Four: AI Music &Tech

V. Track Five: AI & Threats, Bias & Rights

VI: Track Six: AI Fashion & Design


To View By Day - In Eastern Time Zone

I. The Evening Keynotes, July 22nd - 24th

II. Tuesday, July 23rd - Noon - 5 PM

III. Wednesday, July 24th - Noon - 5 PM

IV. Thursday, July 25th - Noon - 5 PM




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