Skip to Content

Podcast

Why Rodrigo Moya Changed His Mind about Chile’s AI Governance Tool for Assessing a Medical Insurance Claims AI Model

Inside Chile’s Department of Social Security Superintendence — the country’s social security and medical insurance agency — medical claims processors hold the livelihoods and future health of thousands of people in their hands. They are responsible for deciding whether or not the government should pay wages when workers are on ...

Notes from Hip Hop MC-turned Indigenous Librarian Alex Soto on Archiving and Accessing Indigenous Cultural Knowledge

Turning what Alex Soto refers to as sometimes “lofty, grand” theoretical Indigenous Data Sovereignty principles and protocols into practice can be mundane, even tedious. It could require combing through hundreds of years-worth of paper documents, photos, oral histories of sensitive cultural knowledge in various formats, and other materials. It requires ...

Introducing WPF’s Privacy on the Ground Podcast

It is my great pleasure to introduce our new podcast, Privacy on the Ground. This podcast is about all of the things World Privacy Forum has been researching, writing about and working on for more than 20 years, but in a format for today’s audiences. Our groundbreaking work on data governance, data protection, privacy, and complex technologies and ecosystems is often concentrated in dense reports that can take years to research and produce. Our podcasts enable us to bring the compelling people, stories, places, news, and ideas we find in the course of our work to the public faster and in an episodic format that allows us to highlight the richness and depth of the people, stories, trends, and ideas you won’t find anywhere else.

We Have “Gifted” Enough: Dr Krystal Tsosie on Indigenous Genomic Data Sovereignty and Righting the Wrongs of Extractive Precision Medicine Research

Dr Krystal Tsosie made what she calls a “hail mary” pass when she and colleagues pushed the genomic science research community to recognize that collection of genomic information from Indigenous peoples may not have offered much benefit to the Indigenous groups who contributed DNA -- and instead perpetuated stereotypes and ...

Skip to Top