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Module B focuses on the risks AI poses for social fairness and trust: how the use of AI-based tools can generate inequality or dishonesty, particularly when human productions differ in nature (e.g. creative vs.
This document examines how AI-driven content curation and recommendation systems affect the quality of public deliberation.
This document examines autonomy as a form of agentive control grounded in attention regulation, goal-directed action, and reflexivity.
The purpose of this document is to provide an overview of how AI, big data and frontier technologies impact rights from the data protection perspective.
The current EU approach to AI regulation faces several challenges and limitations that need to be addressed.
This document adopts a psychological and cognitive perspective on misinformation and disinformation, focusing on the interaction between cognitive biases, emotional motivations, social communication goals, and contemporary information environments
There are both instrumental and intrinsic reasons to value democracy. In short, democracy is valuable instrumentally because:
(1) democracy can assist us in producing laws and policies that protect the rights and interests of citizens,