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Artificial intelligence
The dark side of artificial intelligence: challenges for the legal system
Dr W Gravett
AI’s challenges to privacy and autonomy
The AI surveillance state
Bias and algorithmic transparency
The challenge of regulating AI
Conclusion
Technology and the law
The Honourable Geoffrey Nettle AC QC
Computer says “no”
Dominique Hogan-Doran SC
Automated assistance in administrative decision-making
The evolution of automated decision-making systems: Centrelink and “Robodebt”
Changing technologies in a changing world: Big Data, data matching and profiling
The need for [AI] transparency, [algorithmic] accountability and [robot] ethics
Conclusion
Tweeters, posters and grammers beware: discovery and social media evidence
The Honourable T F Bathurst AC
What is social-media
?
The discoverability of social media information
The destruction of social media information
Conclusion
Online justice: The way of the future?
Mr R Susskind OBE FRSE
Judge v robot? Artificial intelligence and judicial decision-making
Professor T Sourdin
Introduction
Three levels of technological change
The impact of online courts and online dispute resolution
The replacement of judges
An AI judge
Issues that arise with the development of an AI judge
Technology supporting judges
Conclusions
Technology and the future of the courts
The Honourable Justice J Allsop AO
Introduction
Role of the courts
What the courts have achieved and could achieve
Outcomes (and associated challenges)
Conclusion
Artificial intelligence and litigation — future possibilities
D Farrands KC
Introduction
Executive summary
Intelligence — the nature of work — tasks
Can artificial intelligence become human intelligence
?
Where is AI already well established
?
Where is AI not established/desirable
?
Recent developments relating to the legal profession
AI and the work of the courts
AI in interlocutory applications
AI and tribunal work
AI and small claims
AI and private dispute resolution mechanisms
The future of virtual dispute resolution
AI and its impact on how courts are viewed by litigants and society more generally
AI and the work of law firms
AI and the work of counsel
Policy issues for the future regulation of AI
The pace of AI development
Conclusion — impact on litigation in the short to medium term