While AI and robotics reshape our reality, experts explore how these emerging tools could be used to create a more equitable future – from healthcare breakthroughs to Indigenous-led innovation.
Widely-available AI tools are supercharging cyber crime, which means we need to stay on top of our online security like never before.
Ways to interact with virtual versions of our deceased loved ones are now a possibility – but there’s a raft of ethical and emotional challenges involved.
Ransomware has become a rising threat within government, business and academic circles, but there are ways to protect against it.
By basing any AI regulation on the principles of justice, we can take a balanced approach that promotes innovation while safeguarding societal interests.
Sexual deepfake abuse silences women, causing lasting harm, and laws to protect them are inconsistent. A global approach is vital if society truly wants to address the problem.
We asked the artificial intelligence tool what the legal and ethical issues of using it were. Here’s what it told us.
The news that a robot broke a seven-year-old’s finger in a chess tournament raises a fundamental legal question: Who’s liable for the acts of a robot?
The risks of facial recognition technology should be discussed now, before it becomes baked into the security and marketing systems of our increasingly surveillance-based society.
If humans are programming artificial intelligence, are we stuck with the human biases that inadvertently work their way into AI systems?
How did assumptions and biases find their way into machines? As groups around the world fight for social equality, is AI helping or hurting our progress?
Taiwan's “humour-over-rumour” approach is an example of how to effectively counter misinformation in the digital age.
Beyond COVID-19, is AI part of the response to the failures of aged care?
While concern grows over the ethical implications of artificial intelligence applications, interactive artworks are using AI-based emotion recognition technologies in a more positive way.
New facial recognition technology is justifiably raising fears for the end of privacy as we know it.
Monash's most recent cohort of Fulbright, Rhodes and Schwarzman scholars share their passions and plans for the future.
Don’t worry, your self-driving car won’t kill you – as long as research focuses on people and society, too.
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