In today’s episode, I talk about how to create new legal rules to guide tech toward reflecting human values with Brian Beckcom, one of the leading lawyers of his generation.
Brian Beckcom is a Texas Super Lawyer, a designation that recognizes him as one of the top legal experts and practitioners in his arena. In addition to his work as a lawyer, he is also a Computer Scientist and a Philosopher. He created and hosts the popular podcast "Lesson from Leaders with Brian Beckcom."
Brian is an honors graduate of the University of Texas School of Law. He is the author of 6 books and hundreds of articles on a wide variety of topics.
He successfully prosecuted many high-profile cases, including the case that emerged in the aftermath of the Somali Pirate attack on the Maersk Alabama, which made headlines around the world, and the event was made into a Hollywood blockbuster starring Tom Hanks as Captain Phillips. Representing many members of the crew, Brian and his firm took on one of the largest shipping companies in the world, while simultaneously, his investigative efforts ensured that the true story was told.He also represented Captain Wren Thomas, who was kidnapped by Nigerian mercenaries while operating off the Coast of West Africa. Captain Thomas’ story has been featured in national and international media. The case received international attention from the media and maritime shipping companies because of the heroic acts of Captain Thomas during the attack and hostage situation and also because of connections to Boko Haram and corruption in West Africa.
In the conversation we talk about the way that case law formed to treat piracy, that is to say, the practice of attacking and robbing ships at sea, and piracy in our digital age, that is to say, the unauthorized duplication of copyrighted content that is then sold at substantially lower prices in the 'grey' market, We talk about the possibilities for, and the obstructions to, creating legislation that would stop some of the worst consequences and tendencies of big tech. And Brian makes the case for what law, at its most ethical and generative potential, might do to guide tech toward protecting and elevating human values.
Market Values: Dr. Steven Kelts on corporate ethics in the tech industry
Body Snatchers: Manjula Padmanabhan discusses the drama of technology and the black market of organ harvesting
Word Processing: how tech transforms translation
The Next Generation of AI
Creative (R)evolution: PJ Manney and science fiction for good
Running Interference: will democracy survive foreign cyber attacks?
The Private Square: democracy and the attention economy
Digital Democracy
The LAWS of War: Lethal autonomous weapons systems and the new ethics of warfare
Grimm Futures: Technology’s fairy tales
Moving Pictures: Film director Jake Wachtel discusses his new film, Karmalink, and sci-fi in Cambodia
How Women Work: Gender, digital labor, and (not) getting paid to do what you love
A Conversation with Open Dyalog: civil discourse in the digital age
Cybersecurity in the age of Zero Trust
Technically Human 101: a crash course on being human in the age of tech
Embodied Technology and the Quantified Self with Dr. Steven LeBoeuf
The Fork in the Road to Ethical Technology: Vivek Wadhwa on navigating ethical roadmaps in a perilous tech landscape
Principled Dissent: Joe Toscano explains why he left the tech industry and what real change looks like
Memory Drive: The ethics of Holocaust memory in the age of virtual reality
Public Service: Yaël Eisenstat Tackles the Intersection of Ethics, Tech, and Democracy
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