Program We Robot Preliminary Program, Update 1 by Michael Froomkin | February 18, 2019 We’ve posted a revised version of the We Robot 2019 Preliminary Program. Check it out! Friday, April 12, 2019 8:30-9:00 Check- in & Breakfast 9:00-9:15Welcome & Introductions 9:15-10:15The Reasonable Coder by Petros Terzis (University of Winchester)Discussant: Bryan Choi 10:15-11:15[Schedule change] Toward a Comprehensive View of the Influence of Artificial Intelligence on International Affairs by Jesse Woo (Kyoto University)Discussant: Heather Roff 11:15-11:30Break 11:30-12:30Reap What You Sow? Precision Agriculture and The Privacy of Farm Data by Karen Levy (Cornell University), Solon Barocas (Cornell University), & Alexandra Mateescu (Data & Society Research Institute)Discussant: George Kantor 12:30-12:45Lightening Poster Session 12:45-1:45LUNCH 1:45-3:15Panel: Robot/Human HandoffsModerator: Madeleine ElishThe Human/Weapon Relationship in the Age of Autonomous Weapons and the Attribution of Criminal Responsibility for War Crimes by Marta Bo (Asser Institute, The Hague & Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies)Through the Handoff Lens: Are Autonomous Vehicles No-Win for Driver-Passengers by Jake Goldenfein (Cornell Tech); Deirdre Mulligan (UC Berkeley School of Information); Helen Nissenbaum (Cornell Tech)AI, Professionals, and Professional Work: The Practice of Law with Automated Decision Support Technologies by Deirdre Mulligan (UC Berkeley School of Information) & Daniel N Kluttz (UC Berkeley School of Information) 3:15-3:30Break 3:30-4:30Robots in Space: Sharing Our World with Autonomous Delivery Vehicles by Mason Marks (Yale Law School & NYU Law SchoolDiscussant: Kristen Thomasen 4:30-4:45Break 4:45-5:45[Schedule change] The Institutional Life of Algorithmic Risk Assessment by Alicia Solow-Niederman (UCLA School of Law), YooJung Choi (UCLA) & Guy Van den Broeck (UCLA)Discussant: Kristian Lum 5:45-6:00Closing Remarks 6:00-7:00Poster Session & ReceptionDo We Need to Establish Guidelines or Basic Principles for Promoting the Use and Research & Development of AI? by Fumio Shimpo, Takayuki Kato, Kaori Ishii, Takashi Hatae, and Hideyuki MatsumiA Reasonable Expectation of Neural Privacy by Katherine PrattThe VIROS Project: Vulnerability in the Robot Society by Tobias Mahler & Lee BygraveThe Confrontation Clause and Artificial Intelligence by Brian SitesMade By AI: Can AI-Generated Inventions Be Patentable? by Elena PonteReligion and Robots: How Religious Ideas Shape Societal Attitudes Towards Robotic Technology by Milenko BudimirRage Against Machine Learning by Aaron MannesSerious Games: Simulations for Robot Risk Assessment and Communication by Aaron MannesFrom Seeds to Bytes: Data Transformations in the Agricultural Sector by Rian WanstreetRobotic Combat, Control, and Collaboration Through Virtual Twins by Chris Edwards and Tristan FogtRobots and the Curse of Being by Robin MurphyHow Robots and Autonomous Weapon Systems are Changing the Norms and Laws of War by USMA at West Point Professors LTC Chris Korpela, Major Scott Parsons, Major (Retired) Dom Larkin, and Dr. William J. BarryAuthoring Identity: Copyright, Privacy, and Commodity Dissonance in the Digital Age by Bita AmaniThe Theater Method: Exploring Unethical Research Topics in Human-Robot Interaction by Samarendra Hedaoo & Heather Knight 7:30-9:30Conference Dinner @ Mayfair Hotel, Coconut Grove, Miami, Florida Saturday, April 13, 2019 8:00-8:30 Check- in & Breakfast 8:30-9:30Emerging Legal and Policy Trends in Recent Robot Science Fiction by Robin R Murphy (Texas A&M University)Discussant: Kevin Bankston 9:30-10:30Taking Futures Seriously: Forecasting as Method in Robotics Law and Policy by Stephanie Ballard (University of Washington) & Ryan Calo (University of Washington)Discussant: Jennifer Rhee Karen Levy (Cornell University) 10:30-11:00Break 11:00-12:00Administering Artificial Intelligence by Alicia Solow-Niederman (UCLA School of LawDiscussant: Michael Froomkin 12:00-1:00Lunch 1:00-2:00The Robot Koseki: A Japanese Law Model for Regulating Autonomous Machines by Colin P. Jones (Doshisha Law School)Discussant: Hideyuki Matsumi 2:00-2:30Break 2:30-3:30Why the Moral Machine is a Monster by Abby Everett Jaques (MIT)Discussant: Jason Millar 3:30-4:00Break 4:00-5:30Panel: AI & Authorship Moderator: Kate DarlingArtificial Intelligence Patent Infringement by Tabrez Y Ebrahim (California Western School of Law) [Note: Revised version, Artificial Intelligence Inventions & Patent Disclosure, published October 2020]The Death of the AI Author by Carys Craig (York University); Ian Kerr (University of Ottawa)Jack of All Trades, Master of None: Is Copyright Protection Justified for Robotic Faux-riginality? by Sarit Mizrahi (University of Ottawa) 5:30-5:45Final Remarks