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Bio-BOOK

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Chair of the Conference

Wonki Min Chair of the OECD Committee for Digital Economy Policy (CDEP) Korea

Mr. Wonki Min is a professor at SUNY (State University of New York), Korea and the former Deputy Minister at the Korean Ministry of Science, ICT and Future Planning (MSIP). He has also been working as Chair of the OECD Committee on Digital Economy Policy (CDEP) since 2017. Mr. Min has very extensive international experiences. He was the Chairman of the 2015 ITU Council and the 2014 ITU Plenipotentiary Conference. He worked at the OECD, World Bank and UN-APCICT/ESCAP as senior ICT expert. He holds an M.B.A from the University of Washington, an M.A. in public administration from Seoul National University, and a B.A. in history from Yonsei University.

Keynote address

Garry Kasparov Former World Chess Champion and author of ‘Deep Thinking’

Garry Kasparov is a Russian pro-democracy leader, global human-rights activist, business speaker and author, and former world chess champion. Born in Baku, Azerbaijan, in the Soviet Union in 1963, Garry Kasparov became the under-18 chess champion of the USSR at the age of 12 and the world under-20 champion at 17. He came to international fame at the age of 22 as the youngest world chess champion in history in 1985. He defended his title five times, including a legendary series of matches against arch-rival Anatoly Karpov. Kasparov broke Bobby Fischer’s rating record in 1990 and his own peak rating record remained unbroken until 2013. His famous matches against the IBM super-computer Deep Blue in 1996-97 were key to bringing artificial intelligence, and chess, into the mainstream. Kasparov’s latest book is Deep Thinking: Where Machine Intelligence Ends and Human Creativity Begins. (May 2017) It details his matches against Deep Blue, his years of research and lectures on human and machine competition and collaboration, and his cooperation with the Future of Humanity Institute at the University of Oxford. He says, “AI will transform everything we do and we must press forward ambitiously in the one area robots cannot compete with humans: in dreaming big dreams. Our machines will help us achieve them. Instead of worrying about what machines can do, we should worry more about what they still cannot do.”

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Welcome Remarks

Andrew W. Wyckoff Director Directorate for Science, Technology and Innovation (STI) OECD

Andrew W. Wyckoff is the Director of the OECD’s Directorate for Science, Technology and Innovation (STI) where he oversees OECD’s work on innovation, business dynamics, science and technology, information and communication technology policy as well as the statistical work associated with each of these areas. Mr. Wyckoff was previously Head of the Information, Computer and Communications Policy (ICCP) division at the OECD which supports the organisation’s work on information society as well as consumer policy issues. Before heading ICCP, he was the head of STI’s Economic Analysis and Statistics Division which develops methodological guidelines, collects statistics and undertakes empirical analysis in support of science, technology and innovation policy analysis. His experience prior to the OECD includes being a program manager of the Information, Telecommunications and Commerce program of the US Congressional Office of Technology Assessment (OTA), an economist at the US National Science Foundation (NSF) and a programmer at The Brookings Institution. Mr. Wyckoff is a citizen of the United States, holds a BA in Economics from the University of Vermont, and a Master of Public Policy from the JFK School of Government, Harvard University.

Masahiko Tominaga Vice-Minister for Policy Coordination Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications (MIC) Japan

Mr. Masahiko Tominaga serves as Vice-Minister for Policy Coordination (International Affairs) from this July and in charge of formulating international telecommunication policies in the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications. Before taking up current position, Mr. Tominaga held various positions within the Ministry such as supervising telecommunications and radio communications policies, development of information and communication technologies, assisting reconstruction from the Great East Japan Earthquake, spectrum allocations and management, international frequency coordination and management of telephone numbers since he joined the former Ministry of Post and Telecommunications in 1982. He received master’s degree on engineering from the University of Tokyo.

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Session 1: State of AI research

Kenneth Cukier (Moderator) Senior Editor The Economist United Kingdom

Kenneth Cukier is a NYT bestselling author and the Senior Editor for Digital at The Economist in London. He also hosts The Economist’s weekly podcast on technology. Kenn is the coauthor of "Big Data: A Revolution That Transforms How We Live, Work and Think," an award-winning book translated in over 20 languages. His TED Talk on AI, data and society has over 1 million views. Previously, Kenn was a foreign correspondent for two decades in Europe, America and Asia (notably Japan in 2007-12, during the Fukushima crisis). In 2002-04 he was a research fellow at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government. His writings have appeared in the New York Times, Washington Post, Financial Times and Foreign Affairs, among others. He has been a frequent commentator on business and technology for CBS, CNN, NPR and the BBC. He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and a trustee of Chatham House, the Royal Institute of International Affairs. Kenn also serves on the board of directors of International Bridges to Justice, a Geneva-based NGO promoting legal rights in developing countries. Kenn is working on a new book on the benefits of artificial intelligence to society, the economy and human progress.

Francesca Rossi Research Scientist, IBM Watson and Professor of Computer Science, University of Padova Italy

Francesca Rossi is AI Ethics Global Leader at IBM Research and professor of computer science at the University of Padova, Italy, currently on leave. Her research interests focus on artificial intelligence, specifically they include constraint reasoning, preferences, multi-agent systems, computational social choice, and collective decision making. She is

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also interested in ethical issues in the development and behaviour of AI systems, in particular for decision support systems for group decision making. She has published over 170 scientific articles in journals and conference proceedings, and as book chapters. She has co-authored a book. She has edited 17 volumes, between conference proceedings, collections of contributions, special issues of journals, as well as the Handbook of Constraint Programming. She has more than 100 co-authors. She is an AAAI and a EurAI fellow, and a Radcliffe fellow 2015. She has been president of IJCAI and an executive councillor of AAAI. She is Editor in Chief of JAIR and a member of the editorial board of Constraints, Artificial Intelligence, AMAI, and KAIS. She co-chairs the AAAI committee on AI and ethics and she is a member of the scientific advisory board of the Future of Life Institute and of the Leverhulme Centre for the Future of Intelligence. She is in the executive committee of the IEEE global initiative on ethical considerations on the development of autonomous and intelligent systems and she belongs to the World Economic Forum Council on AI and robotics. She is a member of the board of directors of the Partnership on AI, where she represents IBM as one of the founding partners.

Stuart Russel Professor of Computer Science, University of California, Berkeley United States

Stuart Russell received his B.A. with first-class honours in physics from Oxford University in 1982 and his Ph.D. in computer science from Stanford in 1986. He then joined the faculty of the University of California at Berkeley, where he is Professor (and formerly Chair) of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences and holder of the Smith-Zadeh Chair in Engineering. He has served as an Adjunct Professor of Neurological Surgery at UC San Francisco and as Vice-Chair of the World Economic Forum's Council on AI and Robotics. He is a recipient of the Presidential Young Investigator Award of the National Science Foundation, the IJCAI Computers and Thought Award, the World Technology Award (Policy category), the Mitchell Prize of the American Statistical Association, and Outstanding Educator Awards from both ACM and AAAI. From 2012 to 2014 he held the Chaire Blaise Pascal in Paris. He is a Fellow of the American Association for Artificial Intelligence, the Association for Computing Machinery, and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. His book "Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach" (with Peter Norvig) is the standard text in AI; it has been translated into 13 languages and is used in over 1300 universities in 118 countries. His research covers a wide range of topics in artificial intelligence including machine learning, probabilistic reasoning, knowledge representation, planning, real-time decision making, multitarget tracking, computer vision, computational physiology, and philosophical foundations. He also works for the United Nations, developing a new global seismic monitoring system for the nuclear-test-ban treaty. His current concerns include the threat of autonomous weapons and the long-term future of artificial intelligence and its relation to humanity.

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Rodolphe Gelin Robotics Software Engineering Lead SoftBank Robotics, Paris France

As a graduate of the School of Civil Engineering (l’Ecole des Ponts et Chaussées) and with a DEA in Artificial Intelligence, Rodolphe Gelin has 20 years of experience in research with teams in the Commissariat à l’Energie Atomique (CEA)- most notably in robotics used to assist people. On behalf of the ISO (International Organization for Standardization), he led the working group on the definition of the robotic vocabulary. Rodolphe joined SoftBank Robotics, former Aldebaran, in 2008 as Director of Research and Head of Collaborative Projects. He has led various teams at Aldebaran in several national and European collaborative projects. He is most notably the head of Romeo project involving 18 French partners, industrial and academics, in the implementation of a large robot for assistance to the elderly. Rodolphe Gelin now leads the Innovation team which aims to develop new technologies for current robots and continue exploration of humanoid robotics. Rodolphe Gelin is the author of the books "Robot, Friend or Foe? ", “How Can Reality be Virtual?” and “Robot, Man's Best Friend? ” and co-author of “Is Robot Man’s Future?”.

Osamu Sudoh Professor University of Tokyo Interfaculty Initiative in Information Studies Japan

Osamu Sudoh was born in 1955. He received his Ph.D from the Graduate School of Economics, the University of Tokyo. He has been engaged in the research of social informatics, medical-care informatics, and applied economics, notably his leadership in the strategic research project to develop a preventive health system, which would prevent adults from life style diseases enabled by advanced data analytics and accumulated data particularly pertaining to body movements, in cooperation with healthcare practitioners. He was appointed as Professor of Stockholm School of Economics, Sweden (1995), Research Professor of the NTT Research Institute (1997-1999), Dean of the Graduate School of Interdisciplinary Information Studies, the University of Tokyo (2012-2015), and Member of the OECD Global Science Forum Expert Group (2014-2016) before taking up his current duties. He has been invited to various committees and councils held by the government of Japan and advised the development of relevant policies. These include his service as the Chair of Project Team for the Next Generation e-Gov Service (2007-2010), the Director of Info-Communication Policies of Information and Communications Council (2011-), and the Chair of Conference toward AI Network Society held by the Ministry of Internal affairs and Communications of Japan (2016-).

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Philippe Slusallek Scientific Director German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence (DFKI) Germany

Philipp Slusallek is Scientific Director at the German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence (DFKI), where he heads the research area on Agents and Simulated Reality. At Saarland University he has been a professor for Computer Graphics since 1999, a principle investigator at the German Excellence-Cluster on “Multimodal Computing and Interaction” since 2007, and Director for Research at the Intel Visual Computing Institute since 2009. Before coming to Saarland University, he was a Visiting Assistant Professor at Stanford University. He originally studied physics in Frankfurt and Tübingen (Diploma/M.Sc.) and got his PhD in Computer Science from Erlangen University. His research covers a wide range of topics including artificial intelligence and multi-agent systems, digital reality, real-time realistic graphics, motion synthesis, novel programming models, high-performance computing, computational sciences, 3D-Internet technology, and others.

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Session 2: AI Applications and Case Studies

Session Moderator: Andrew Wyckoff (see Bio in the welcome remarks)

Valerio Dilda

Partner McKinsey & Company, Paris France

Valerio Dilda is a Partner in McKinsey’s Paris office. He joined McKinsey & Company in 2002 in our Milan office. Valerio works primarily in process industry (such as Chemicals and Metals) and advanced assembly industries (e.g., Aerospace & Defense, Energy). Valerio is one of the leaders of the global Operations Advanced Analytics practice, with functional spikes in Manufacturing and Supply Chain. In particular he’s an expert of Advanced Analytics techniques for the optimization of complex manufacturing processes/ supply chains. Between 2008 and 2013 Valerio worked for United Technologies as Head of Global Operations for the Global Firefighting division (1 bn $ annual turnover; ~1 000 employees). In this role Valerio was responsible for 9 plants globally and the overall division purchasing and logistic activities. Valerio is a graduate of Politecnico di Milano (with a specialization in Thermodynamics) and holds an MBA from INSEAD.

Reinhard Stolle

Vice President for Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning Department of Artificial Intelligence at BMW AG, Munich Germany

Reinhard Stolle has been Vice President for Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Machine Learning at BMW Group since 2016. His organization focuses on developing self-driving cars using AI techniques. Stolle holds a PhD from the University of Colorado at Boulder, where he worked on heterogeneous reasoning techniques for the task of automatically building models of physical systems. From 1999 until 2000, Stolle was a postdoctoral fellow at the Knowledge Systems Lab at Stanford University, contributing to research on model-enabled planning and control. From 2000 until 2004, he was a Research Scientist at Xerox PARC in Palo Alto, California, where he led a research project on automated text understanding, combining techniques from computational linguistics and model-based reasoning. In 2004, Stolle joined BMW Car IT GmbH in München, leading a software

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innovation team in the infotainment area. In 2008, he founded the central department for “Software Architecture and Development” at BMW Group. From 2012 until 2016, Stolle served as Managing Director of BMW Car IT GmbH in Ulm, building up software expert teams in the areas of infotainment, driver assistance, and autonomous driving.

Max Yuan Founder and Chairman Xiaoi Robot Technology, Shanghai China

Max Yuan, founder and chairman of Xiaoi. The creator of the world’s leading smart machine technology supplier and platform operator, Xiaoi. Leading talent of Shanghai, 2014. Under the leadership of Max Yuan, Xiaoi has been focusing on AI for over 16 years, and has established a development and application team of over 600 members. It plays a leading role in smart machine technologies including natural language processing, semantic analysis and understanding, knowledge engineering and smart big data. Xiaoi applies for hundreds of patents each year; it has taken the lead in the drafting of the world’s first standard of affective computing of user interface and China’s first AI semantic corpus standard. Xiaoi provides services to ICBC, CCB, China Mobile, Huawei, SF Express, GE, Wanda Group, as well as hundreds of large and medium enterprises, government branches, thousands of SMEs and developers. Its users have exceeded 500 million. Together with Apple, Google, Amazon, Xiaoi was recommended by Gartner as a typical representative of conversational AI. As a top expert in AI, Max Yuan was invited to APEC, Boao forum for Asia, Summer Davos. His guiding opinions, such as “to realize AI’s value through industrialization”, “to develop AI, we need to focus on algorithm, data and specific applications”, were highly recognized by other guests and media.

Lynette Webb Senior Manager European Policy Strategy, Google, London United Kingdom

Lynette Webb has worked for Google since 2007, first as researcher and speechwriter for the head of Google Europe, and now in the European Policy Strategy team focusing on issues relating to leading-edge technologies and their application. Previously, Lynette spent 6 years working within Aegis Media, advising agency teams on emerging digital media and communications trends. Prior roles included business development for News Corp’s European arm and 4 years consulting for McKinsey. She has an MBA from New York University and a B.Sc (Hons) majoring in Mathematics from the University of Melbourne.

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Session 3: Close-up on AI in Space Applications

Claire Jolly (Moderator) Head of the OECD Space Forum Unit Directorate for Science, Technology and Innovation (STI) OECD

Claire Jolly is Head of Unit in the Directorate for Science, Technology and Innovation (STI) in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). She is in charge of the OECD research & analysis on the economics and innovation dimensions of two important emerging sectors: the ocean and the space environment. Much science, research and development, innovation and economic activities are now linked to the exploration and exploitation of the oceans and of the space environment. Claire Jolly has twenty years of experience in business and policy analysis, having worked for both public and private organisations in aerospace and defence, in Europe and North America, before joining the OECD in 2003. Her background is in international economics (Univ. Versailles and Cornell University) and aerospace engineering (ENSTA, Paris), with an interest in space (MSc, ISU in Strasbourg). She is an alumna of the Institute for Higher National Defence Studies in Paris (Institut des Hautes Etudes de Défense Nationale, IHEDN).

Tugdual Ceillier

Lead Data Scientist Earthcube, Toulouse France

After graduating from the École Polytechnique in 2012, Tugdual has done a PhD in data processing applied to Stellar Physics at the Astrophysics Laboratory of the Commissariat à l’Énergie Atomique (CEA). He then joined the Image Processing R&D of Airbus Defense & Space in Toulouse where he worked on subjects such as automatic detection of clouds in satellite images or precise registration of meteorological data taken from geostationary satellites. In 2016, he met Arnaud Guérin and Renaud Allioux, cofounders of Earthcube. The startup provides various services derived from satellite images, such as monitoring services of isolated infrastructures or activity estimation of industrial areas. When he joined Earthcube as an Image Processing engineer,

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Tugdual was the first permanent employee of the startup. He is today in charge of the data science team.

Bryan Yates Director of Sales - EMEA region Orbital Insight, California United States

Bryan Yates is the Director of Sales and General Manager for the EMEA region at Orbital Insight, a geospatial analytics company that provides unprecedented visibility into the economic pulse of the world by using AI to analyze vast amounts of satellite imagery to count objects like cars, oil tanks and ships. Prior to joining Orbital Insight, Bryan was the Director of Sales at Medallia, a Sequoia-backed SAAS Customer Experience Management company. Prior to Medallia, Bryan worked as a Senior Director for over 13 years at Eze Software Group, the leading global provider of investment management software solutions to a broad range of clients across the investment community. Bryan was born and raised in South Africa and holds a Bachelor's Degree in Economics and Psychology from the University of the Witwatersrand.

Thanh-Long Huynh CEO Quantcube Technology, Paris France

Thanh-Long HUYNH, CEO of QuantCube Technology, a leading start-up specialized in Big Data Analytics to predict macro trends and financial forecasts such as real-time economic growth, inflation index but also political elections. QuantCube Technology has been well known for its ability to predict in-a-row: Brexit, the Trump election, and the French elections. QuantCube Technology has built up one of the largest data warehouse, Earth Observation satellite data, shipping data and social networks in different languages including English, French, Arabic, Japanese and Chinese. Those results were achieved with a R&D team of 25 people, most of them are data scientists. Thanh-Long, Fulbright scholar, graduated with MS Financial Mathematics from the University of Chicago, MS Statistics from ENSAE ParisTech and MS Wealth Management from ESCP-Europe. In 2016, QuantCube Technology has been ranked among top10 FinTech North America by Finance-Montréal, awarded Blue Ocean Laureate as well as a subsidy of 1.3 m€ for its 'MacroNow' project by the French Ministry of Economics and Finance. For more information about QuantCube Technology : http://www.q3-technology.com/company/video/video.html

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Bahaa Alhaddad Space Business Development and Project manager Starlab Ltd, Harwell Oxford Innovation Centre United Kingdom

Dr. Bahaaeddin Alhaddad received his BSc in Architecture in 2000 (Gaza, Palestine), obtained an MSc in Space Systems on Earth Observation in 2002 (Lecce, Italy) and pursued a PhD in Urban Management and Valuations in 2009 (Barcelona, Spain). From 2004 to 2011, being staff of the Centre of Land Policy and Valuations- CPSV/UPC, he has been intensively involved in several European collaborative projects. He joined the Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis- CASA at University College London- UCL to work on urban remote sensing and Smart Cities related projects, in 2011. Since 2012, he is working as Space Business Development and project manager at Starlab Ltd, Harwell Oxford Innovation Centre (UK).

Alexander Cooke Counsellor Department of Industry, Innovation and Science, Australia

Dr Cooke is the Counsellor (Industry, Innovation and Science) based at the Australian Embassy and Permanent Mission to the European Union in Brussels. Dr Cooke’s role is to manage the relationship between Australia and European countries in relation to innovation, industry, science, research, education and resources matters, advance the portfolio’s interests across Europe and facilitate bilateral relationships and dialogue between Australia and European countries. Dr Cooke has most recently worked in the Science Policy Branch of the Department of Industry, Innovation and Science, with responsibility for domestic and international science matters, and as Senior Science Adviser to the Hon Greg Hunt MP, then Minister for Industry, Innovation and Science. Dr Cooke supported the development of science-related measures under the Australian Government’s National Innovation and Science Agenda, including the Global Innovation Strategy and policies to inspire Australians to engage with Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM).

Christophe Roeland

Policy Officer, Space Data for Societal Challenges and Growth Directorate-General for Internal Market, Industry, Entrepreneurship and SMEs (DG GROW), Brussels European Commission (EC)

Christophe Roeland has been working with the European Commission in Brussels since 2003. He is a policy officer in the Directorate-General for Internal Market, Industry, Entrepreneurship and SMEs (DG GROW), which is notably responsible for developing European space policy and managing the European

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space programmes Galileo and Copernicus. Copernicus, the European Earth Observation and Monitoring Programme, is a cornerstone of the European Union's efforts to monitor the Earth and its ecosystems. It supports the vital tasks of protecting our environment and security by providing accurate, reliable and frequent Earth observation data. As a member of the 'Space data' team, Christophe contributes to promoting the use of Copernicus data and applications in support of public policies and economic growth. He implements the European Commission strategy encouraging the uptake of space services and data, both in Europe and internationally. Christophe has a background in political science and international relations.

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Session 4: Enhancing Discovery – the Role of AI in Science

Dominique Guellec (Moderator)

Head of the Science and Technology Policy Division Directorate for Science, Technology and Innovation (STI) OECD

Dominique Guellec is Head of the Science and Technology Policy (STP) Division of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). This division covers notably: innovation policies, science policies, biotechnology and nanotechnology issues, national innovation studies, innovation for development, the STI Outlook, the Innovation Policy Platform, and the Space Forum. Mr. Guellec joined the OECD in 1995 and has worked on statistics and quantitative economic analysis of science, innovation and growth. In 2004-2005, Mr. Guellec was Chief Economist of the European Patent Office (Munich). Mr. Guellec has authored several books and many articles on patents, innovation and economic growth. His (co-) publications in English include The Economics of the European Patent System (Oxford University Press, 2007); From R&D to Productivity Growth: the Sources of Knowledge Spillovers and their Interaction (Oxford Review of Economics and Statistics, 2004). Of French nationality, Mr. Guellec is a graduate from the École nationale de la statistique et de l’administration économique (ENSAE, Paris).

Stephen Roberts Professor of Machine Learning in Information Engineering University of Oxford United Kingdom

Stephen Roberts is the RAEng/Man Professor of Machine Learning at the University of Oxford. He is a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering, the Royal Statistical Society, the Institute of Physics and is a Faculty Fellow of the Alan Turing Institute. Stephen is Director of the Oxford-Man Institute of Quantitative Finance, co-Director of the Oxford Centre for Doctoral Training in Autonomous Intelligent Machines and Systems (AIMS) and co-founder of the University Machine Learning spin-out company, Mind Foundry. He has published widely, having some 300 publications which have accrued 18,000 citations. Stephen’s interests lie in methods for machine learning & data analysis in complex problems, especially those in which noise and uncertainty abound. His current major interests include the application of

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machine learning to huge astrophysical data sets (for discovering exoplanets, pulsars and cosmological models), biodiversity monitoring (for detecting changes in ecology and spread of disease), smart networks (for reducing energy consumption and impact), sensor networks (to better acquire and model complex events) and finance (to provide better insight into time series and aggregate large numbers of unstructured information streams).

Hiroaki Kitano

President and CEO Sony Computer Science Laboratories Japan

Hiroaki Kitano Ph.D is President and CEO of Sony Computer Science Laboratories, Inc., Corporate Executive of Sony Corporation, President of The Systems Biology Institute, Professor at Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University, and Director of Laboratory for Disease Systems Modeling, RIKEN Center for Integrative Medical Sciences. He is also a Founding President of the Robocup Federation, and Council of the World Economic Forum AI & Robotics. He received The Computers and Thought Award from the International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence in 1993, Prix Ars Electronica 2000, and Nature Award for Creative Mentoring in Science in 2009, as well as being an invited artist for Biennale di Venezia 2000 and Museum of Modern Art, New York in 2001.

Ross King Professor of Machine Intelligence Manchester University School of Computer Science United Kingdom

Ross D. King is Professor of Machine Intelligence at the University of Manchester, UK. His main research interests are in the interface between computer science and science. The research achievement he is best known for of is originating the idea of a ‘Robot Scientist’: using laboratory robotics to physically implement a closed-loop scientific discovery system. His Robot Scientist ‘Adam’ was the first machine to hypothesize and experimentally confirm scientific knowledge. His robot ‘Eve’ is searching for drugs against neglected tropical diseases, and cancer. His work on Robot Scientists has been published in the top scientific journals, Science and Nature, and has received wide publicity. For the last two years his focus has been on the implementation of a new computational paradigm: Nondeterministic Universal Turing Machines. He is also very interested in computational economics, and computational aesthetics.

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Jonathan McLoone Director of Technical Services, Communication and Strategy Wolfram Research Europe

As Director of Technical Services, Communication and Strategy at Wolfram Research Europe, Jon McLoone is central to driving the company’s technical business strategy and leading the consulting solutions team. Described as “The Computation Company”, the Wolfram group is a world leader in integrated technology for computation, data science and AI including machine learning. With over 25 years of experience working with Wolfram Technologies, Jon has helped in directing software development, system design, technical marketing, corporate policy, business strategies and much more. He leads the technical services team which delivers data science and computation solutions for engineering, business and scientific sectors. Jon gives regular keynote appearances and media interviews on topics such as the Future of AI, Enterprise Computation Strategies and Education Reform, across multiple fields including healthcare, fintech and data science. He holds a degree in mathematics from the University of Durham. Jon is also Co-founder and Director of Development for computerbasedmath.org, an organisation dedicated to a fundamental reform of maths education and the introduction of computational thinking in education. The movement is now a worldwide force in re-engineering the STEM curriculum with early projects in Estonia, Sweden and Africa.

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Session 5: AI Policy Landscape

Anne Carblanc (Moderator) Head of Digital Economy Policy Division Directorate for Science, Technology and Innovation (STI) OECD

Ms. Anne Carblanc is Head of the Digital Economy Policy Division in the OECD Directorate for Science, Technology and Innovation. Her division develops policy frameworks to help the digital transformation work for the economy and society. DEP serves two Committees and their Working Parties, which are composed of delegations from member and partner countries: the Committee on Digital Economy Policy and the Committee on Consumer Policy. Ms Carblanc joined the OECD in 1997. Prior to joining the OECD, she was Secretary General, Director of Services in the French data protection authority (Commission Nationale de l’informatique et des libertés - CNIL). She has also served ten years in the French judicial system, both as a judge in charge of criminal investigations and as the head of the criminal law department in the Ministry of Justice.

David Heiner Strategic Policy Advisor Microsoft Corporation

David A. Heiner is Strategic Policy Advisor at Microsoft Corporation. Dave focuses on the societal implications of the rapid development of computer technology, particularly artificial intelligence. For many years Dave served as a Vice President and Deputy General Counsel at Microsoft, with responsibility at various times for privacy, competition law, telecommunications law, accessibility law, human rights, online safety and the company’s work with international standard-setting organizations. Dave is a 1982 graduate of Cornell University, where he received a B.A. in physics, and a 1985 graduate of the University of Michigan Law School, where he served on the editorial board of the law review. Following law school, Dave clerked for the Honorable Thomas P. Griesa of the U.S. District Court in New York. Before joining Microsoft in 1994, Dave practiced law at Sullivan & Cromwell in New York. Dave chairs the board of Probono.net, a national non-profit that leverages technology to promote

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access to justice for those who cannot afford a lawyer. Dave also works closely with Kids in Need of Defense, a legal aid group for unaccompanied immigrant children in the United States, and with several other legal aid and human rights organizations.

Nicolas Miailhe Co-founder and President The Future Society at Harvard Kennedy School of Government

Nicolas Miailhe is the co-founder and President of "The Future Society at Harvard Kennedy School" under which he also co-founded and leads the "AI Initiative". A recognized strategist, social entrepreneur, and thought-leader, he advises multinationals, governments and international organizations. Nicolas is a Senior Visiting Research Fellow with the Program on Science, Technology and Society (STS) at HKS. His work centers on the governance of emerging technologies. He also specializes in urban innovation and civic engagement. Nicolas has ten years of professional experience in emerging markets such as India, working at the nexus of innovation, high technology, government, industry and civil society. Before joining Harvard, he was Regional Director South Asia at Safran Sagem, the world leader in aerospace, defense and security. An Arthur Sachs Scholar, Nicolas holds a Master in Public Administration from the Harvard Kennedy School of Government. He also holds a Master in Geostrategy and Industrial Dynamics from Pantheon-Assas University in Paris and a Bachelor of Arts in Political Sciences from Sciences Po Strasbourg.

Benedetta Arese Lucini Advisor to the Minister on digital and innovation policies Ministry of Economic development Italy

Benedetta Arese Lucini 34 years old, graduated in Economics at Bocconi University and received an MBA from NYU Stern School of Business, and has over 9 years of experience in the digital industry and within startups, with diverse experiences across Europe, US and South East Asia. She returns to Italy as Uber General Manager to lead the expansion in the country and today is co-founder of her own startup Oval Money, and advisor to the Minister of Economic development on digital and innovation policies.

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Susumu Hirano

Faculty of Policy Studies/Professor, Dean, Graduate School of Policy Studies, Chuo University Japan

Susumu Hirano received his LL.B. from Chuo University, Tokyo (1984) and LL.M. from Cornell University, Ithaca, New York (1990). He was an associate at CORNELL INT’L LAW JOURNAL. Before he changed his profession from a legal practitioner to the tenured professor at Chuo University in 2004, he had been the General Counsel at NTT DoCoMo, Inc., for four years, this is the largest mobile (cellular) common carrier in Japan. When he was the General Counsel, he contributed much to the legislation of the ACT ON REGULATION OF TRANSMISSION OF SPECIFIED ELECTRONIC MAIL (anti-spam statute). He published many books and articles including: AMERICAN TORTS (Chuo Univ. Press, 2006, pp. 480) (in Japanese); AMERICAN CONTRACTS (Chuo Univ. Press, 2009, pp. 630) (in Japanese); and ELECTRONIC TRANSACTIONS AND CYBER-LAW (NTT Publishing, 1999, pp. 260) (in Japanese). And a new book, ROBOT LAW, will be published soon (forthcoming in Nov. 2017, pp. 300) (in Japanese). He has participated in many study groups held by the Japanese government. For example, he was the Acting Chair-person at the Conference on Networking among AIs, Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications of Japan (MIC). Currently, he is the Core Member at the Conference toward AI Network Society and Chair-person of the Subcommittee on the AI R&D Principles, MIC.

Cédric Villani Député LREM de l’Essonne, chargé de mission IA France

Cédric Villani est un mathématicien français, titulaire 2010 de la Médaille Fields et lauréat 2014 du prix Doob. Professeur de l’Université de Lyon, il a été professeur-invité à l’Université de Berkeley, de Princeton et de GeorgiaTech puis directeur de l’Institut Henri Poincaré de 2009 à 2017 dont il a démissionné au moment de son élection comme député de l’Essonne. A l’Assemblée nationale, il siège à la commission des Lois et préside l’Office Parlementaire d'Évaluation des Choix Scientifiques et Technologiques. En effet, Cédric Villani a toujours été impliqué dans les rapports entre Sciences et Société. Il est membre de l’Académie des sciences et de l’Académie pontificale des Sciences. Il a donné des conférences dans plus de 70 pays, publié plusieurs ouvrages dont le best-seller « Théorème Vivant » traduit en 12 langues. Il a participé à de nombreux Conseils scientifiques auprès d’institutions publiques - dont la Commission européenne - ou privées (Conseil scientifiques d’Orange, d’EDF, d’Atos et du BCG). Cédric Villani est ancien élève de l’ENS Ulm, docteur en mathématique et habilité à diriger des recherches. Il est docteur honoris causa de plusieurs universités dont HEC Paris. Il est chevalier de la

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Légion d’honneur et Vice-président du think-tank EuropaNova.

Xiao Zhang Vice Director China Internet Network Information Center China

Ms. Xiao Zhang is the Vice President of China Internet Network Information Center. She has served in the State Council Informatization office, Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, Cyberspace Administration of China, and has been stationed in the World Bank. She has long been engaged in ICT policy research, and actively promoted the long-term international cooperation with OECD and other international organizations in the field of digital economy. Xiao works very closely with think tanks in ICT in China. She has built good relationships with industry sectors in China. For the forth forum of WIC she is responsible in the coming December, Jack Ma (Alibaba), Pony Ma (Tencent), Robbin (Baidu), Lei Jun (Xiaomi) and other world famous entrepreneurs will attend.

Pekka Sivonen Director, Digitalisation Strategy and Programmes Tekes Innovation Funding Agency Finland

BEEN THERE, DONE THAT: Has raised the most private equity funding in Finland, 38 million Euros in two rounds. 3+35 million. RECOGNITION: Has been selected as the Entrepreneur Of The Year in Services in Finland by Ernst &Young in years 2004, 2005 and 2006 RESPONSIBLE VISIONARY: Chair of Finland 2030 Future Committee for Corporate renewal. Participation in ICT2015 Workgroup. Judges internationally. FROM ZERO TO HERO: Founder of Digia, a publicly NASDAQ OMX listed mobile software company. Took the company from 1 person to 1.600 persons. Has 20 years' experience in mobile software and 35 years as entrepreneur. CREATOR: Previously Executive in Residence position at Aalto University Center for Entrepreneurship as the Head of AppCampus, a three year global acceleration program funded by Microsoft and Nokia, then heading health-tech startup accelerator VERTICAL in collaboration with Samsung and Sonera. Co-Founder of HealthSPA ecosystem. Now responsible for digitalization strategy at Tekes, the Finnish Funding Agency for Innovation. PASSION FOR LIFE: Pekka’s passion is mentoring and coaching new and established start-ups on business-plans, clients, financing and go-to-market. He also loves cooking, fly-fishing and downhill skiing.

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Marten Kaevats National Digital Advisor Government Office of Estonia Estonia

Marten Kaevats, is the National Digital Advisor in the Government Office of Estonia or unofficially the Chief Innovation Officer of Estonia. He studies the impact of various scalable technologies on the spatial behaviour of individual people and communities, as he believes that the industrial revolution and the hyperlocal model of life will create reformatory changes to the spatial and social behaviour of people. Marten has graduated from governmental talent management programme in 2017. He is educated as architect and city planner and has been the chief of TAB 2015 “Self-Driven City” curatorial team. Marten is also an active member of several civil society organisations; he was also one of the founding members of the Uue Maailma Selts (New World Society) in 2007 which triggered reformatory changes in participatory democracy and a revolution in civil society, also he founded and contributed to the creation of freeware community web platform Community Tools, established in 2008.

Cécile Huet Deputy Head of the Robotics and AI unit European Commission (EC)

Cécile Huet is Deputy Head of the Unit "Robotics and Artificial Intelligence" at the European Commission. This unit funds and assists beneficial robotics and AI developments within Europe. The unit is in charge of the world's largest civilian programme in robotics with a budget of €700 million EU funding from Horizon 2020, supplemented by €2.1 billion from the European robotics industry in the context of the Robotics Public-Private Partnership. Cécile joined the European Commission in 2001, and the unit dealing with Cognitive systems and Robotics since its creation in 2004. Before joining the EC, she worked for the industry in the field of signal processing after a post-doc at the University of California Santa Barbara and a PhD at University of Nice Sophia Antipolis. In 2015, she has been voted in as one of the 25 most influential women in robotics: http://robohub.org/25-women-in-robotics-you-need-to-know-about-2015/.

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Session 6: Employment and Skills

Mark Keese (Moderator) Head of the Skills and Employability Division Directorate for Employment, Labour and Social Affairs OECD

Mark Keese is the Head of the Skills and Employability Division in the Directorate for Employment, Labour and Social Affairs at the OECD. He is responsible for the OECD’s work on analysing labour market issues and for developing employment and training policies that help member and non-member countries promote more and better jobs. He is in charge of preparing the OECD’s annual review of labour market trends and issues. He is also responsible for the Employment Directorate’s contribution to the OECD Programme for the International Assessment of Adult Competencies (PIAAC). Mr. Keese has been at the OECD since 1985 and has worked on a variety of macro economic and labour market issues including: productivity modelling and measurement; labour markets in transition in Eastern Europe; low pay and earnings mobility; and minimum wages. He was responsible for a major review of ageing and employment policies that involved 21 member countries and was a member of the taskforce that developed the OECD’s Jobs Strategy. His published works include articles on labour markets in transition countries, earnings inequality, minimum wages, and ageing and employment policies. Prior to joining the OECD, Mr. Keese worked as an economist with the Australian Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet. He has a Bachelor of Science with Honours in Economics from Adelaide University.

Frank Levy Rose Professor Emeritus, MIT USA

Frank Levy is labor economist who studies computers’ impact on work. Between 1998 and 2004, Levy, Richard J. Murnane, and David Autor developed a tasks-and-rules framework that remains one of economists’ main tools to model computers’ effects on jobs and the labor market. His recent work includes a 2017 paper, co-authored with Dana Remus, on how artificial intelligence affects the job of

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corporate lawyer. The paper is published in the Georgetown Journal of Legal Ethics. A paper on computers and populism in the near-term is forthcoming in the Oxford Review of Economic Policy. Levy is Rose Professor Emeritus at MIT, a Research Associate in the Harvard Medical School Department of Health Care Policy, and a Research Associate in Duke Robotics at Duke University.

Christina Colclough Senior Policy Advisor , UNI Global Union

Dr. Christina Colclough is Director of Platform & Agency Workers, Digitalisation and Trade at UNI Global Union. UNI represents more than 20 million workers in the private services sectors. In this capacity, she leads UNIs work on everything digital. From how AI, BigData, new technologies, data privacy and protection and new business forms effect work and workers’ rights, to trade and investment agreements and trade union responses to it all. Prior to taken up this position in UNI’s head office, Colclough was Head of EU Affairs in UNI’s European office and General Secretary for the Nordic Financial Unions in Sweden. Before joining the trade union movement, she was a labour market researcher for 7 years at Copenhagen University, from where she also holds a PhD in sociology. Christina is born in the UK, and has since lived in six countries. See UNIs future of work website here: www.thefutureworldofwork.org and main website here: www.uniglobalunion.org Connect on Twitter: @cjcolclough

James Hairston Head of Public Policy, Oculus VR, Facebook

James Hairston is Facebook's artificial intelligence and virtual reality policy lead and Head of Public Policy at Oculus where he coordinates the company's work with governments around the world. James was previously a Policy Advisor at the US Small Business Administration, served on President Obama's Hurricane Sandy Rebuilding Task Force, and worked on international employment issues on the economic policy team at the Center for American Progress before joining government. James has a JD from Stanford and a BA from Harvard.

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Stuart Elliot Director of Board on Testing and Assessment US National Academy of Science

Stuart W. Elliott is the Henry David Visiting Scholar at the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine, where he is developing a long-term program to assess computer capabilities that will be carried out jointly with the OECD. He recently returned to the Academies after three years as an analyst at the OECD working with PIAAC, the OECD’s test of adult skills. This work resulted in a 2015 report analyzing the problem solving dimension of the PIAAC test and a 2017 report on Computers and the Future of Skill Demand. He also contributed a chapter to the 2017 Oxford Handbook on Skills and Training entitled “Projecting the Impact of IT on Work and Skills in the 2030s.” Before going to the OECD, Stuart spent a decade at the Academies as the director of the Board on Testing and Assessment. In this role he led numerous studies on educational tests and indicators, assessment of science and 21st century skills, applications of information technology, and occupational preparation and certification. Stuart holds a Ph.D. in economics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and received postdoctoral training in cognitive psychology at Carnegie Mellon University.

Young Tae Kim Secretary General International Transport Forum (ITF)

Young Tae Kim is the Secretary-General of the International Transport Forum (ITF). He was elected by the transport ministers of ITF member countries at their annual summit on 1 June 2017 and took office in August 2017. Prior to his election as ITF Secretary-General, Dr. Kim distinguished himself in the civil service of his native Korea, most recently serving as Director-General in the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport (MOLIT). As Deputy Director-General from 2015, he was responsible for coordinating various transport policies including on autonomous vehicle, greenhouse gas reduction, urban transportation, Intelligent Transport Systems and road safety, among others. After joining the MOLIT in 1994 as Deputy Director for Urban Transport, Dr. Kim also held several Deputy Director and Director positions with responsibility for housing welfare, integrated city development and overseas infrastructure construction. He was seconded to the Prime Minister's Commission on Administrative Reform in 1996 and the Presidential Committee on Social Inclusion in 2005-2007. From 2010 to 2014, Dr. Kim worked in Washington, D.C., as Counsellor for Construction, Transport and Maritime Affairs at the Korean Embassy. Dr. Kim earned his Master's degrees in Public Policy from Seoul National University, Korea, and in Urban Studies from Paris University de Vincennes-Saint-Denis, France. He also received his Doctorate degree in Political Sociology and Public Policy from the Institut d'Etudes Politiques (Sciences-Po), Paris, France.

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Session 7: Privacy and Security

Katarina de Brisis (Moderator) Deputy Director General at Ministry of Local Government and Modernisation, Chair of OECD Working Party on Security and Privacy in the Digital Economy Norway

Katarina de Brisis is deputy director general in the Department of ICT policy and public sector reform in the Norwegian Ministry of Government Administration and Reform. She has also been working as Chair of the Working party on Security and Privacy on Digital Economy under OECD Committee on Digital Economy Policy (CDEP) since 2017. She heads the section dealing with the issues of national ICT policy coordination, encompassing areas such as information security, digital content and reuse of public sector data, green ICTs and smart technologies, accessibility of ICT-systems, cloud computing and digital competences. Ms de Brisis has been a member of various EU expert committees, among them the advisory committee on electronic signatures directive. She also used to work on digital libraries and archives in her previous positions. Ms de Brisis is a MSc and certified civil engineer in the field of computer science and has 31 years of working experience in information technology. She is also an MBA in public finances and management.

Peter Fleischer Global Privacy Counsel, Google

Peter has worked as Google’s Global Privacy Counsel since 2006. Based in Europe, Peter is Google’s longest serving privacy leader. He counsels Google teams on how to design privacy sensitive and legally compliant products. Peter has designed many of Google’s privacy compliance programs. He has met with thousands of privacy officials and leaders worldwide. Peter has managed scores of regulatory actions around the world, and appeared before some of the world’s highest courts. Prior to joining Google, Peter worked for 10 years at Microsoft, as EMEA privacy leader and Director of Regulatory Compliance. Peter is a graduate of Harvard College and Harvard Law School. He is an elite swimmer.

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Taylor Owen Assistant Professor of Digital Media and Global Affairs University of British Columbia

Taylor Owen is an Assistant Professor of Digital Media and Global Affairs at the University of British Columbia and a Senior Fellow at the Columbia Journalism School. His research and writing focuses on the intersection between media, technology and public policy. He was previously the Research Director of the Tow Center for Digital Journalism at Columbia University. His Doctorate is from the University of Oxford and he has been a Trudeau and Banting scholar. He serves on the Board of Directors of the Center for International Governance Innovation (CIGI). Taylor is the author, most recently, of Disruptive Power: The Crisis of the State in the Digital Age (Oxford University Press, 2015) and the co-editor of The World Won’t Wait: Why Canada Needs to Rethink its Foreign Policies (University of Toronto Press, 2015, with Roland Paris), Journalism After Snowden: The Future of the Free Press in the Surveillance State (Columbia University Press, 2017, with Emily Bell) and The Platform Press: How Silicon Valley Re-engineered Journalism (CJR, 2017, with Emily Bell). His work can be found at www.taylorowen.com and @taylor_owen.

Mathias Cellarius Data Protection and Privacy Officer SAP

Mathias Cellarius studied law at the University of Freiburg, Germany. He joined SAP in 2005 and has been working in the legal department since then. Since 2013 he has been heading a new team within SAP SE Global Legal focusing on regulatory matters and their impacts on SAP’s current and future business models. Additionally, in July 2014 he has become SAP’s Data Protection Officer and heads SAP's Data Protection and Privacy Office.

Kenneth Cukier See Bio as moderator in Session 1

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Session 8: Safety, Responsibility and Liability

Session Moderator: Wonki Min (see Bio as overall chair)

Rod Freeman International products lawyer and Partner Cooley, London office United Kingdom

Rod Freeman is an international products lawyer. He is a partner in the London office of Cooley, one of the world’s leading tech-focused law firms. Rod is routinely ranked as a leading product liability lawyer in the major legal directories, where he is described as “the outstanding go-to specialist for product liability matters” and “without a shadow of a doubt the most knowledgeable product liability lawyer in the European space”. He works alongside the world's leading tech and innovative companies to help them solve their product-related issues, protect their reputations, defend their products and build innovation-based success. With a background in high-stakes product liability litigation and more than 20 years’ devoted to international products law, Rod understands the challenges faced by innovative companies in an increasingly challenging global environment. His experience includes facilitating the international launch of innovative products in a range of industries, and finding practical and workable solutions to regulatory compliance issues around the world. Rod is deeply embedded in the product liability and product safety community internationally, often working with policy-makers to help shape the future of product liability and product safety regulation, with particular focus on the challenges of technical innovation.

Georg Borges Professor Faculty of Law, Saarland University Germany

Georg Borges is a Professor of Civil Law, Legal Informatics, German and International Business Law and Legal Theory and is the managing director of the Institute of Legal Informatics at the Saarland University

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in Saarbrücken, Germany. Georg Borges studied law at the University of Frankfurt/Main, the University of Geneva and the University of Bonn and also studied economics at the Fernuniversität Hagen. During his studies, he worked for a Tax Law Firm and achieved the status of tax law assistant. After graduation, Georg Borges worked both as an attorney in an international law firm and as a researcher at the University of Cologne before he was promoted to the position of professor in 2004. From 2004 to 2014, he was Professor of Law at the Ruhr-University Bochum. In addition, he also sat as a judge at the State Court of Appeals, Hamm Circuit. As an expert on Business Law with a focus on IT Law, Prof. Borges has authored several studies and statements for German as well as European Institutions. His current research focuses on autonomous systems, the internet of things, cloud computing and German and European Data Protection Law.

Hans Ingels Head of Unit, Single Market Policy, Mutual Recognition and Surveillance DG GROW, Brussels European Commission (EC)

Hans INGELS is the Head of the Single Market Policy, Mutual Recognition and Market Surveillance Unit in the European Commission's DG for Internal Market, Industry, Entrepreneurship and SMEs. The Unit is also responsible for Council Directive 85/374/EEC concerning liability for defective products. Hans Ingels obtained a Law Degree (KULeuven – Belgium), a Degree in Notarial Studies (KULeuven - Belgium), a Postgraduate in Company Law (KUBrussel Belgium) and a Master Degree in European and International Law (VUBrussel – Belgium). He joined the European Commission in 1995 and spent most of his career on files related to the single market for products

Pierre Chalançon Chair of the BIAC Consumer Task Force and Vice President Regulatory Affairs Vorwerk & Co KG, Representation to the EU, Brussels

Pierre Chalançon is Vice President Regulatory Affairs of the German industrial group Vorwerk & Co KG and Head of Vorwerk Representation to the EU in Brussels. Since January 2017, he chairs the BIAC Consumer Task Force. He holds a Master’s degree in political sciences and EU affairs. He is fluent in French, German and English.

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Session 9: Transparency, Oversight and Ethics

Douglas Frantz (Moderator) Deputy Secretary-General OECD

Mr. Douglas Frantz took up his duties as Deputy Secretary-General on 2 November 2015. In this role, he actively contributes to the strategic direction of the OECD’s development agenda, notably in the context of supporting countries in the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals by 2030, in cooperation with the United Nations. In addition to focusing on OECD’s regional initiatives in South East Asia, the MENA region, Latin America and Africa, he oversees the Organisation's global relations portfolio as well as its activities on science, technology and innovation. Mr. Frantz is former Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs in the US State Department and also worked for then-Senator John Kerry as chief investigator and deputy staff director of the US Senate Foreign Relations Committee. He was previously a newspaper reporter and editor for more than 35 years, reporting from 40 countries and covering major conflicts including both Gulf wars and the Afghan war. He shared a Pulitzer Prize for coverage of the aftermath of 9/11 while at the New York Times. He also is the author of 10 nonfiction books. Mr. Frantz holds a B.A. from DePauw University, and a Master of Science from Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism.

Konstantinos Karachalios Managing Director IEEE-Standards Association

A globally recognized leader in standards development and intellectual property, Dr. Ing. Konstantinos Karachalios is managing director of the IEEE Standards Association and a member of the IEEE Management Council. As managing director, he has been enhancing IEEE efforts in global standards development in strategic emerging technology fields, through technical excellence of staff, expansion of global presence and activities and emphasis on inclusiveness and good governance, including reform of the IEEE standards-

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related patent policy. As member of the IEEE Management Council, he championed expansion of IEEE influence in key techno-political areas, including consideration of social and ethical implications of technology, according to the IEEE mission to advance technology for humanity. Results have been rapid in coming and profound; IEEE is becoming the place to go for debating and building consensus on issues such as a trustworthy and inclusive Internet and ethics in design of autonomous systems. Before IEEE, Konstantinos played a crucial role in successful French-German cooperation in coordinated research and scenario simulation for large-scale nuclear reactor accidents. And with the European Patent Office, his experience included establishing EPO’s patent academy, the department for delivering technical assistance for developing countries and the public policy department, serving as an envoy to multiple U.N. organizations.

Joanna Bryson Reader at University of Bath, and Affiliate, Center for Information Technology Policy at Princeton University

Joanna J. Bryson is a transdisciplinary researcher on the structure and dynamics of human- and animal- like intelligence. Her research covers topics ranging from artificial intelligence, through autonomy and robot ethics, and on to human cooperation. She holds degrees in Psychology from Chicago (AB) and Edinburgh (MPhil), and Artificial Intelligence from Edinburgh (MSc) and MIT (ScD). She has additional professional research experience from Oxford, Harvard, and LEGO, and technical experience in Chicago's financial industry, and international organization management consultancy. Bryson is presently a Reader (associate professor) at the University of Bath, and an affiliate of Princeton's Center for Information Technology Policy.

Carolyn Nguyen Director of Technology Policy Microsoft Corporation

Dr. M-H. Carolyn Nguyen is a Director of Technology Policy at Microsoft, focused on policy issues related to internet governance, the digital economy, and artificial intelligence. Her past activities have included policy initiatives on open/big data, machine learning, data ethics, the internet of things, intelligent systems, privacy, and their effects on existing social, economic, and policy frameworks. She has worked at the intersection of these disciplines, collaborating with researchers, subject-matter experts, and industry pioneers, developing an evidence base to encourage a more holistic approach to policy. Her work is aimed at influencing global policy-making by engaging with stakeholders and raising awareness

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of the potential of technology, through participation in public policy dialogues and venues, including the United Nations, Internet Governance Forum (IGF), the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, and the World Economic Forum. She is a member of the Multistakeholder Advisory Group for the IGF and a vice chair of the International Chamber of Commerce Commission on Digital Economy. Prior to joining Microsoft, Carolyn held a number of positions with Research in Motion, Avaya Communications, Lucent Technologies, and Bell Laboratories in the US and abroad. In addition to her policy work, her experience includes a range of business and technical responsibilities in developing and bringing to market innovative telecommunications solutions globally. Carolyn received her Ph.D. from the Center of Telecommunications Research at Columbia University, her Master from Cornell University, her Bachelor from Princeton University, and completed Executive Business Management Programs at Harvard Business School and London Business School.

Seán Ó hÉigeartaigh Executive Director Cambridge's Centre for the Study of Existential Risk (CSER)

Seán Ó hÉigeartaigh is the Executive Director of Cambridge’s Centre for the Study of Existential Risk (CSER), an academic research centre focused on emerging global risks and long-term challenges. He is also a Senior Research Associate with the Centre for the Future of Intelligence, where he leads the Centre’ work on policy and responsible innovation in AI. In the last five years he has played a central role in research projects on long-term trajectories and impacts associated with artificial intelligence (AI) and other emerging technologies, leading research programmes at the Future of Humanity Institute (Oxford) from 2011-2015, co-developing the Strategic AI Research Centre (Cambridge-Oxford collaboration) in 2015, and the Leverhulme Centre for the Future of Intelligence (Cambridge-Oxford- Imperial-Berkeley collaboration) in 2015-16. nicolasSeán’s research spans the impacts of artificial intelligence and other emerging technologies, horizon-scanning and foresight, and global risk.

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Session 10: Wrap-up and Next step

Chair: Wonki Min (see Bio as overall chair)

Marc Rotenberg Representative of OECD Civil Society Information Society Advisory Council (CSISAC) and President, Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC)

Marc Rotenberg is President of the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) in Washington, DC. EPIC is a non-profit, independent research organization that works closely with a distinguished Advisory Board. Marc frequently testifies before Congress on emerging privacy and civil liberties issues. EPIC also files amicus briefs to assist courts as they confront novel legal issues concerning technology and privacy. Marc has taught Information Privacy at Georgetown Law since 1990. He is editor of “The Privacy Law Sourcebook” (EPIC 2016) and “Privacy and Human Rights” (EPIC 2006) and co-editor of “Privacy in the Modern Age: The Search for Solutions" (The New Press 2015) and author (with Anita Allen) "Privacy Law and Society" (West 2016). His recent articles explore privacy and transparency in democratic societies (for Newsweek); reform of the credit reporting industry (Harvard Business Review); and big data and privacy (Scientific American). He currently serves on expert panels for the Aspen Institute, the National Academies of Science, and the OECD. Marc is also a founding board member and former Chair of the Public Interest Registry, which established and manages the .ORG domain. Marc helped establish CSISAC and currently serves on the steering committee. He is a graduate of Harvard College and Stanford Law School, and received an LLM in International and Comparative Law from Georgetown .

Anna Byhovskaya Policy Advisor Trade Union Advisory Committee to the OECD (TUAC)

Anna Byhovskaya is a policy advisor to the Trade Union Advisory Committee to the OECD (TUAC) covering innovation and technology policies, the digital economy, skills policies, the OECD Ministerial Council and Forum, as well as the G20 jointly with the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC). She worked as the policy coordinator of the CSO Partnership for Development Effectiveness (CPDE) as part of the Global Partnership for Effective Development Cooperation (GPEDC), at the OECD and as a broadcast journalist in Paris and Berlin.

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Nicole Primmer Senior Policy Director Business and Industry Advisory Committee (BIAC)

Nicole Primmer oversees taxation and fiscal affairs, digital economy, employment, and G20 employment-related activities. She is also responsible for BIAC’s engagement to the BIAC Annual Consultation with OECD Ambassadors and the OECD Ministerial. Prior to joining BIAC, Nicole worked for the United States Council for International Business (USCIB), for NEC Corporation, and at the Columbia Business School Centre on Japanese Economy and Business under the direction of Professor Hugh Patrick. Nicole holds a Master’s Degree in International Affairs from Columbia University, and a B.A. in French and Political Science from Duquesne University. She also completed graduate studies at Sciences Po in Paris, and is a former Rotary Ambassadorial Scholar at Sofia University in Tokyo. Nicole joined BIAC in 2000, is fluent in English and French, and has basic fluency in Japanese. She is also an accomplished lyric soprano.

Clara Neppel Senior Director, IEEE European Office, Internet Technical Advisory Committee (ITAC)

Dr. Clara Neppel works in the IEEE Vienna office as the Senior Director for European Business Operations. In this role, she is responsible for the growth of IEEE’s operations and presence in Europe, focusing on the needs of industry, academia, and government. Clara serves as a point of contact for European business development and initiatives with regards to technology and engineering and related public policy issues that help implementing IEEE’s continued global commitment to fostering technological innovation and excellence for the benefit of humanity. Clara joined IEEE after many years with the European Patent Office where she was involved in various aspects relating to innovation, intellectual property and public policy in the field of information and communication technologies. She holds a Ph.D. in Computer Science from the Technical University of Munich and a Master in Intellectual Property Law and Management from the University of Strasbourg.

Last, but not least, meet the organisers:

Karine Perset, Nobu Nishigata, Yuki Yokomori, Anna-Sophie Liebender, Cristina Serra Vallejo and Sarah Ferguson.