Dark Technologies: Exposing the technology of modern war LIVESTREAM

Dark Technologies: Exposing the technology of modern war LIVESTREAM

Join a host of authors, presenters, celebrities and journalists for this year's Sydney Writers' Festival Livestream

By Gold Coast Libraries

Date and time

Sunday, May 26 · 2:30 - 3:30pm AEST

Location

Southport Library

Lawson Street Southport, QLD 4215 Australia

About this event

  • 1 hour

Hear about the role of emerging technologies in conflict and occupation with Walkley Award–winning journalist Antony Loewenstein (The Palestine Laboratory), artificial intelligence expert Toby Walsh (Faking It) and host Michael Richardson.


Toby Walsh

Toby Walsh is Chief Scientist of UNSW.AI, University of NSW's new AI Institute. He is a strong advocate for limits to ensure AI is used to improve our lives, having spoken at the UN and to heads of state, parliamentary bodies, company boards and many others on this topic. This advocacy has led to him being "banned indefinitely" from Russia. He is a Fellow of the Australia Academy of Science and was named on the international "Who's Who in AI" list of influencers. He has written four books on AI for a general audience, the most recent is Faking It! Artificial Intelligence in A Human World.

Antony Loewenstein

Antony Loewenstein is an independent journalist, best-selling author, filmmaker and co-founder of Declassified Australia. He's written for The Guardian, The New York Times, The New York Review of Books and many others. His books include Pills, Powder and Smoke, Disaster Capitalism and My Israel Question. His documentary films include Disaster Capitalism and the Al Jazeera English films West Africa's Opioid Crisis and Under the Cover of Covid. He was based in East Jerusalem 2016–2020.

Michael Richardson

Michael Richardson is a writer, researcher and teacher living and working on Gadigal and Bidjigal country. An Associate Professor at UNSW Sydney and an Associate Investigator with ADM+S, his research examines how technology, power and culture shape knowledge in war, security and surveillance. His latest book is Nonhuman Witnessing: War, Climate, and Data After the End of the World.

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