PODCAST · education
AI Ethics Now
by Tom Ritchie, Jennie Mills, IATL, WIHEA, University of Warwick
AI Ethics Now is a podcast dedicated to exploring the complex issues surrounding artificial intelligence from a non-specialist perspective, including bias, ethics, privacy, and accountability. Join us as we discuss the challenges and opportunities of AI and work towards a future where technology benefits society as a whole. This podcast was first developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills as part of The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society module, taught as part of IATL at the University of Warwick.
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20. AI and Grief: When Death Becomes a Business Model
Content note: This episode contains discussion of bereavement, pregnancy loss, and references to suicide. Please take care when listening.What happens when grief becomes a product? When the people we've lost are turned into data? And who are AI resurrection services really designed to serve - the bereaved, or the bottom line?In this episode, Alfrun Rose, writer, performer, and the creative force behind Dead Air, a darkly comic solo show that has been turning heads since its acclaimed run at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe and is now playing at Greenwich Theatre, London, 13 to 16 May 2026, joins the podcast to explore what happens when death becomes a business model. Inspired by her own experience of losing her father, Alfrun describes how she fell into researching real-world AI tools that claim to keep the conversation going after death. Dead Air is the result, not just theatre, but a timely interrogation of who these tools are really serving, and at what cost to people processing grief.We discuss the predatory marketing of AI grief services, the dangers of sycophantic design, what "temperature control" reveals about the illusion of connection, the thin line between therapeutic tool and exploitative product, and why Alfrun made the deliberate choice to create a show about AI without using any AI at all.AI Ethics NowExploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond.A University of Warwick IATL PodcastThis podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the at the University of Warwick. The IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.'This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience.Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts.We will discuss:Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountabilitySocietal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanityThe Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanityIf you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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19. AI and Inclusive Clinical Education: Levelling the Playing Field or Reinforcing the Bias?
Can generative AI help create fairer healthcare training, or will it simply amplify the inequities already baked into clinical education? And what happens when the shortcuts we reach for in curriculum development undo years of hard-won progress on inclusive practice?In this episode, Ban Haider and Saskia Walker, both senior lecturers at City St George's, University of London, discuss their work examining generative AI in clinical education through the lens of EDI and inclusive practice. Ban brings a critical perspective rooted in concerns about bias and representation, while Saskia brings an optimistic one, shaped in part by her own experience as a dyslexic academic who saw AI's levelling potential from the start. Together, they make a compelling case for why the inclusion conversation needs to be at the centre of how healthcare educators adopt AI, not bolted on afterwards.They discuss using AI to generate diverse patient vignettes, the risk of stereotypical outputs when prompts aren't carefully constructed, awarding gaps, neurodivergence and academic anxiety, the danger of AI models being trained on AI-generated content, and why university policies around AI use need to catch up with the reality of how people actually work and learn.AI Ethics NowExploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond.A University of Warwick IATL PodcastThis podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the at the University of Warwick. The IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.'This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience.Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts.We will discuss:Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountabilitySocietal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanityThe Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanityIf you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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18. AI and Co-Intelligence: Beyond Prompts to Critical Partnership
Is the biggest danger of AI not the technology itself, but how unreflectively we use it? And what does it actually mean to be the "human in the loop" when that concept remains frustratingly vague?Valentina Vlasova and Dr Kevin Coffey, senior lecturers at OMNES Education London, discuss the Co-Intelligence and AI Literacy module they designed after witnessing widespread unreflective AI use among their students. Drawing on Ethan Mollick's Co-Intelligence and the concept of co-thinking introduced by AI Swiss in 2025, they've built a course that goes far beyond prompt engineering to ask deeper questions about how humans and AI can genuinely collaborate.Valentina and Kevin share how they teach students to identify cultural, linguistic, and gender biases in AI outputs, including a classroom exercise that reveals how ChatGPT categorises ambition and management as male, and home and childcare as female. They discuss why bias in AI doesn't just reflect the world as it is, but amplifies it, creating a vicious cycle that's difficult to break.We explore the concept of embodied intelligence (what humans bring that AI fundamentally cannot) and why AI's inability to say "I don't know" matters more than students initially realise. Kevin and Valentina also reflect on what hasn't worked in the classroom, including how ChatGPT's failure to recognise mental health crisis language had real-world consequences before OpenAI intervened.With 70-80% of their students believing AI will replace their chosen career, this episode is essential listening for anyone thinking about how to prepare the next generation not just to use AI, but to lead it.AI Ethics NowExploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond.A University of Warwick IATL PodcastThis podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the at the University of Warwick. The IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.'This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience.Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts.We will discuss:Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountabilitySocietal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanityThe Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanityIf you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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17. AI and Amplification: Beyond Automation to Human-Centred Progress
Is AI destined to replace us, or can it help us thrive? And why are we still stuck in the "wow" phase when we should be asking harder questions about implementation?Dr Bryan Reimer, research scientist at the MIT Age Lab and co-author of How to Make AI Useful: Moving Beyond the Hype to Real Progress in Business, Society and Life, discusses AI's journey from "wow" to "woah" to "grow", and why most organizations haven't moved past excitement about automation.Bryan argues the real value of AI isn't replacing human capability through automation, but augmenting it through amplification. The question isn't "what can AI automate?" but "how can AI make humans better at what they do?"We discuss AI as doer, assistant, and creator, and why the creator role raises the most ethical concerns right now. When machines generate new information, who owns it? Is machine-assisted design copyrightable? AI doesn't invent – it regresses to the mean – so it's "new, but not new."Bryan shares why AI as assistant is where the real success lies: it leaves ethical responsibility with humans while providing cognitive support. Students aren't just using ChatGPT to write essays, they're using it as an electronic tutor to understand material that wasn't explained clearly in lectures. Education needs to shift from banning AI to teaching both AI-amplified work and fundamental skills.We explore why "success is toxic" for established organizations struggling with AI adoption, why small start-ups can leapfrog traditional leaders, and how lead adopters are flying so fast that laggard may never catch up. Leadership before modern AI will be fundamentally different from leadership going forward.Bryan introduces "cathedral thinking" versus "strip mining" in how we need to build AI systems designed to last decades, not just solve today's problems. AI won't automate away the things we love doing: creativity, art, poetry, music. The goal is amplifying human creativity, not replacing it.Essential listening for anyone navigating AI adoption, wondering whether job loss predictions are overstated, or trying to understand how to make AI actually useful rather than just impressive.AI Ethics NowExploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond.A University of Warwick IATL PodcastThis podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the at the University of Warwick. The IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.'This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience.Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts.We will discuss:Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountabilitySocietal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanityThe Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanityIf you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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16. AI and Evidence: When Nobody is Accountable
What happens when AI is used to analyse human behaviour and relationships, and the output is treated as reliable evidence in a formal process against another person?Dr Craig Webber, School Lead for the MA in Artificial Intelligence at the University of Southampton, joins the podcast to explore a growing and largely unaddressed risk at the intersection of AI and institutional decision making. Craig introduces a concept with profound implications for anyone who has ever been on the receiving end of a formal process - the confident confabulation. Large language models don't flag uncertainty. They don't interrogate the premise of the question they're asked. They reflect back whatever narrative they're fed, dressed in language that carries the appearance of authority and expertise.The result can be devastating. And the frameworks for accountability when it goes wrong are, at best, underdeveloped.This conversation explores how sycophantic AI reflects back and amplifies the narratives it receives, how AI generated analysis gets laundered into apparently human authored reports, and what it means when confident confabulations enter high stakes processes where people's lives and reputations are at stake.Craig returns throughout to two words. Legitimacy - does the process that produced this output have any genuine claim to being a reliable account of what actually happened? And accountability - when a confident confabulation causes real harm to a real person, who answers for that? Not the AI. Not the platform. Not the person who fed it the narrative and accepted what it reflected back without question.Currently, the answer is nobody.AI Ethics NowExploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond.A University of Warwick IATL PodcastThis podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the at the University of Warwick. The IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.'This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience.Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts.We will discuss:Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountabilitySocietal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanityThe Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanityIf you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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15. AI and the Campus Revolution: When Students Outpace Their Universities
What happens when AI use among university students doubles in a single year and institutions are still catching up?To mark the launch of Coursera's 2026 AI on Campus Report, Marni Baker Stein, Chief Content Officer, and Jack Moran, Global Enterprise PR Manager, join me to discuss the findings. With nearly half of UK students now using AI to complete their study tasks and 80% reporting improved grades, the data raises urgent questions about what we are actually measuring when we talk about academic success in an AI-augmented world.This conversation explores whether better grades signal deeper learning or simply more polished outputs, why the race to detect AI-generated work is one institutions are already losing, and what it would mean to genuinely redesign assessment for an AI-enabled generation. Marni and Jack also make a compelling case that AI, if intentionally designed, has the potential to strengthen belonging and reduce equity gaps rather than widen them, pointing to evidence from Coursera's own platform that underserved learners are among the most active users of AI tutoring tools.We discuss the tension between student enthusiasm and educator anxiety, why fewer than a third of UK universities have a formal AI policy despite the scale of adoption, and what it means for institutions to move from reactive policies to proactive frameworks that put faculty confidence and student equity at the centre.AI Ethics NowExploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond.A University of Warwick IATL PodcastThis podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.'This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience.Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts.We will discuss:Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountabilitySocietal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanityThe Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanityIf you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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14. AI and Agentic Systems: Balancing Autonomy with Human Oversight
When AI agents can navigate systems autonomously, where do you draw the line between efficiency and control?Ed Crook, VP Strategy & Operations at DeepL, reveals how the company shifted from specialised translation to launching autonomous AI agents, and why human-in-the-loop oversight remains non-negotiable even as agentic AI scales across heavily regulated industries.This conversation explores how DeepL agents work through a secondary browser interface where users can view real-time navigation, pause, raise their hand, and take or relinquish control at any time. Ed explains why the agent asks when unsure, building trust the same way you'd work with a new colleague, rather than locking themselves in a dark room until 5pm. We discuss where users still actively request control (login access, sensitive systems), what 20,000 completed tasks during beta testing revealed about when AI needs intervention, and why agents can flawlessly complete advanced tasks yet fail at very basic ones.Ed shares how DeepL works with financial services, pharmaceuticals, and legal professionals navigating compliance requirements whilst exploring agentic AI. Over half of legal professionals report AI lets them spend more time on high-judgment strategic tasks, and two-thirds are already exploring agentic systems. He explains why shadow AI shouldn't be vilified but understood as employees seeking productivity.We discuss how the EU AI Act encourages proportionate responses where high-risk applications carry high responsibility, why having European-built AI success stories matters, and how centrally managed AI tools create governance oversight whilst enabling peer learning across teams. Ed reveals the education gap: access to AI tools has grown faster than training on responsible use, and why upskilling, both technical and conceptual, is the burning priority for companies navigating AI adoption.The challenge: build agents that combine autonomy with human judgment, scale AI adoption with responsible governance, and future-proof teams through peer learning rather than just technical training.AI Ethics NowExploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond.A University of Warwick IATL PodcastThis podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.'This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience.Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts.We will discuss:Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountability.Societal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanity.The Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanity.If you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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13. AI and Ecolinguistics: Building Ecosophies to Stop AI Amplifying Environmental Harm
How do we prevent AI from amplifying destructive environmental narratives at a massive scale - potentially 100 billion words per day?Mariana Roccia and Jorge Vallego, from the H4rmony Project, reveal how ecolinguistics and ecosophies can reshape how large language models engage with ecological issues whilst addressing cultural and linguistic bias in AI-generated environmental discourse.This conversation explores how mainstream LLMs celebrate Coca-Cola as a "cultural icon" or patio heaters as "brilliant" without acknowledging environmental costs unless explicitly challenged. The team shares how they developed Theophrastus, an open-source assistant built on ChatGPT, instructed with an ecosophy: a living framework of ecological values that guides language generation toward planetary well-being rather than profit.We discuss how word embeddings cluster dominant narratives together in multidimensional space, why fine-tuning and reinforcement learning can shift those embeddings toward ecologically aligned responses, and how system prompts embed ecosophy into every AI interaction. The team explains their approach using preference datasets rather than imposed answers, working with the International Ecolinguistics Association's 1,500+ researchers to ensure cultural and linguistic representation.Mariana discusses why language representation matters, explaining how AI models are predominantly trained in English, which risks amplifying cultural imbalances and losing local ecological knowledge that's vital for different cultures. Jorge explains why transparency around environmental ethics in AI matters as much as addressing carbon footprint, and why major AI players need to adopt ecosophies just as they address gender and racial bias.This episode continues our new short series featuring conversations from the Building Bridges: A Symposium on Human-AI Interaction held at the University of Warwick on 21 November 2025. The symposium was organised by Dr Yanyan Li, Xianzhi Chen, and Kaiqi Yu, and jointly funded by the Institute of Advanced Study Conversations Scheme and the Doctoral College Networking Fund, with sponsorship from Warwick Students' Union.AI Ethics NowExploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond.A University of Warwick IATL PodcastThis podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.'This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience.Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts.We will discuss:Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountability.Societal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanity.The Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanity.If you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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12. AI and Dialogic Feedback: Reframing Student Agency Through AI Partnerships
What happens when AI becomes a dialogic partner in feedback rather than a replacement for human judgment? Dr Viktoria Magne, Dr Rebecca Mace, Sarah Hooper, and Dr Sharon Vince from the University of West London and University of Worcester reveal how structured AI conversations are helping students engage more deeply with feedback whilst keeping academic judgment clearly human-led.This conversation explores how AI creates low-stakes, judgment-free spaces where students can question, challenge, and co-construct understanding without fear of looking silly or upsetting relationships with staff. The team shares how they've designed reflective cycles using structured prompts that position students as active agents rather than passive recipients, and why this matters for equity, emotional safety, and critical AI literacy.We discuss the difference between transactional and dialogic AI use, why feedback shouldn't feel like static judgment, how AI helps students engage in "conversation with themselves", and what happens when first-generation students gain access to a network they've never had before. The team explains why digital literacy means learning to question AI outputs, not just operate tools, and how transparency around staff AI use builds trust.This episode continues our new short series featuring conversations from the Building Bridges: A Symposium on Human-AI Interaction held at the University of Warwick on 21 November 2025. The symposium was organised by Dr Yanyan Li, Xianzhi Chen, and Kaiqi Yu, and jointly funded by the Institute of Advanced Study Conversations Scheme and the Doctoral College Networking Fund, with sponsorship from Warwick Students' Union.AI Ethics NowExploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond.A University of Warwick IATL PodcastThis podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.'This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience.Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts.We will discuss:Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountability.Societal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanity.The Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanity.If you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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11. AI and Assessments: When Students Ask "Does This Sound Like Me?"
What happens when students delegate not just writing, but reasoning itself to AI? Chahna Gonsalves, Senior Lecturer at King's Business School, reveals how generative AI is transforming critical thinking in higher education through what she calls "epistemic offloading", the process of outsourcing intellectual work to tools like ChatGPT.This conversation examines how students are using AI to interpret readings, generate argument structures, and pre-evaluate their own work, shifting responsibility for core intellectual tasks. Chahna explores why AI prizes polish over depth, how this affects students' evaluative judgment, and what happens when students ask "does this sound like me?"We discuss the equity implications of tech-savviness, why reflexive AI use matters more than bans, and how Bloom's Taxonomy reveals which cognitive processes students readily offload versus protect. Chahna argues we need transparent conversations about delegation, judgment, and what truly requires human reasoning.Essential listening for anyone grappling with AI's role in learning, assessment design, and the future of thinking itself.This episode continues our new short series featuring conversations from the Building Bridges: A Symposium on Human-AI Interaction held at the University of Warwick on 21 November 2025. The symposium was organised by Dr Yanyan Li, Xianzhi Chen, and Kaiqi Yu, and jointly funded by the Institute of Advanced Study Conversations Scheme and the Doctoral College Networking Fund, with sponsorship from Warwick Students' Union.AI Ethics NowExploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond.A University of Warwick IATL PodcastThis podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.'This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience.Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts.We will discuss:Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountability.Societal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanity.The Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanity.If you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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10. AI and Dependence: Are We Misdiagnosing the Harms?
Do you use ChatGPT or Claude daily for work? Mark Carrigan, Senior Lecturer in Education at Manchester Institute of Education, joins the podcast to discuss why we might be misdiagnosing the harms of generative AI. His research suggests the problems aren't inherent to the technology itself, but arise when AI systems meet the already broken bureaucracies of higher education and other sectors.Mark introduces the LLM Interaction Cycle, a framework he developed with philosopher of technology, Milan Stürmer, to understand how we engage with AI over time through three phases: positioning (how we assign roles to the AI), articulation (how we put our needs into words), and attunement (the sense that the AI understands us). He explains how use that begins as purely transactional often drifts toward something more affective as models build memory and context about us, and why this drift matters for how we think about ethical AI use.We go on to explore teacher agency in the age of generative AI, examining why fear of appearing ignorant prevents honest conversations between educators and students. Mark discusses three key risks facing universities:lock-in (dependency on specific platforms), loss of reflection (increasingly habitual rather than thoughtful use), and; commercial capture (vendor interests shaping institutional practices).He argues that reflective use isn't just beneficial but ethically necessary, yet the pressures facing academics and students make reflection increasingly difficult.The conversation finishes by examining why universities in financial crisis are particularly vulnerable to both the promises and pitfalls of AI adoption, how institutional AI strategies risk creating new waves of disruption, and why understanding student realities (including significant paid work commitments) is essential to addressing concerns about AI in education. Mark concludes by making the case that we cannot understand the problems of generative AI without understanding the wider systemic crisis in higher education.This episode launches our new short series featuring conversations from the Building Bridges: A Symposium on Human-AI Interaction held at the University of Warwick on 21 November 2025. The symposium was organised by Dr Yanyan Li, Xianzhi Chen, and Kaiqi Yu, and jointly funded by the Institute of Advanced Study Conversations Scheme and the Doctoral College Networking Fund, with sponsorship from Warwick Students' Union.AI Ethics NowExploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond.A University of Warwick IATL PodcastThis podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.'This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience.Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts.We will discuss:Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountability.Societal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanity.The Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanity.If you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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9. AI and Bias: How AI Shapes What We Buy
As you search for Christmas gifts this season, have you asked ChatGPT or Gemini for recommendations? Katarina Mpofu and Jasmine Rienecker from Stupid Human join the podcast to discuss their research examining how AI systems influence public opinion and decision-making. Conducted in collaboration with the University of Oxford, their study analysed over 8,000 AI-generated responses to uncover systematic biases in how AI systems like ChatGPT and Gemini recommend brands, institutions, and governments.Their findings reveal that AI assistants aren't neutral—they have structured and persistent preferences that favour specific entities regardless of how questions are asked or who's asking. ChatGPT consistently recommended Nike for running shoes in over 90% of queries, whilst both models claimed the US has the best national healthcare system. These preferences extend beyond consumer products into government policy and educational institutions, raising critical questions about fairness, neutrality, and AI's role in shaping global narratives.We explore how AI assistants are more persuasive than human debaters, why users trust these systems as sources of truth without questioning their recommendations, and how geographic and cultural biases develop through training data, semantic associations, and user feedback amplification. Katarina and Jasmine explain why language matters - asking in English produces US-centric biases regardless of where you're located - and discuss the implications for smaller brands, niche markets, and diverse user groups systematically disadvantaged by current AI design.The conversation examines whether companies understand they're building these preferences into systems, the challenge of cross-domain bias contamination, and the urgent need for frameworks to identify and benchmark AI biases beyond protected characteristics like race and gender.AI Ethics NowExploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond.A University of Warwick IATL PodcastThis podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.'This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience.Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts.We will discuss:Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountability.Societal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanity.The Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanity.If you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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8. AI and Decentralisation: Own AI or Be Owned By It
In this episode, Max Sebti, co-founder and CEO of Score, challenges the centralised control of computer vision systems and makes the case for decentralised AI as a matter of public interest.Max brings experience from AI data annotation and model development, where he witnessed how closed systems collect and control vast amounts of visual data. Now at Score, running on the Bittensor network, he's building "open source computer vision" - systems that are publicly verifiable, permissionless, and collectively owned rather than corporately controlled.His central argument: we face a choice between "own AI or be owned by AI." As computer vision expands from sport into healthcare, insurance, and public surveillance, who controls these systems becomes existential. Max argues citizens should have access to model weights and training data as a democratic necessity.We explore what decentralisation means in practice: how Bittensor's incentive mechanisms unlock talent and data centralised systems can't access, why open source doesn't sacrifice performance, and the stark reality that camera systems are making decisions about you based on models you cannot see.Max introduces competing visions: a "Skynet" scenario where private entities own all visual data, versus a "solar punk" future of abundant energy and AGI where open AI serves collective benefit. The difference? Transparency, accountability, and public ownership.The conversation tackles thorny questions: where should boundaries exist in open systems? How do you prevent misuse whilst maintaining accessibility? Max admits his team hasn't solved this - decentralised AI means thousands of contributors with different values building toward the same goal.Max closes with a call to action: push for open source AI models where people can verify, query, and hold systems accountable. His vision moves AI from corporate product to public utility - not because it's idealistic, but because the alternative is too dangerous.AI Ethics NowExploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond.A University of Warwick IATL PodcastThis podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.'This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience.Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts.We will discuss:Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountability.Societal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanity.The Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanity.If you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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7. AI and Security: The Arms Race We're Losing
In this episode, Jadee Hansen, Chief Information Security Officer at Vanta, reveals why AI security isn't keeping pace with AI adoption—and why that should concern every organisation.Jadee brings over 20 years of cybersecurity experience across highly regulated sectors, from Target to Code42, where she co-authored the definitive book on insider risk. Now at Vanta, a leading trust management platform, she's navigating one of security's biggest challenges: AI is being deployed by both attackers and defenders faster than either side truly understands it.The numbers are stark: 65% of leaders say their use of agentic AI exceeds their understanding of it. Over half of organisations have faced AI-powered attacks in the past year. Yet only 48% have frameworks to manage AI autonomy and control.Jadee's central argument: AI security isn't about applying AI everywhere, but it's about applying it wisely. The fundamental challenge? AI is non-deterministic. Unlike traditional security controls where "if this, then that" works predictably, AI models will do what they'll do regardless of training. You cannot guarantee outcomes.The conversation explores the "human in the loop" framework: identifying which tasks are low-risk enough for AI automation and which require human oversight. Jadee argues organisations must resist the temptation to automate high-stakes decisions, even when the technology seems capable. The teams that succeed won't be those deploying AI most aggressively, but those thinking most carefully about practical applications with minimal risk.We discuss the AI arms race in security and Jadee introduces the concept of treating AI adoption as a shared infrastructure problem requiring joint risk decisions. She challenges the static approach to policy creation, arguing we need "living, breathing" policies that evolve as rapidly as AI itself—not annual updates that are obsolete before implementation.The episode offers particular relevance for education, where Jadee's insights expose a gap: whilst universities debate AI ethics and data usage extensively, security implications often go underdiscussed. Yet these security considerations may ultimately determine whether AI integration succeeds or fails.Jadee closes with practical guidance on building trust in AI systems: transparency about what AI is doing, optionality in how it's applied (because risk tolerance varies), and continuous monitoring through frameworks like ISO 42001 and NIST AI RMF. Her vision? Moving from static compliance checks to real-time control monitoring.AI Ethics NowExploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond.A University of Warwick IATL PodcastThis podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.'This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience.Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts.We will discuss:Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountability.Societal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanity.The Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanity.If you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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6. AI and Enterprise Implementation: Building Bodies for Intelligent Brains
In this episode, Christian Lund, co-founder of Templafy, the leading AI-powered document generation platform, diagnoses why billions in AI investment aren't translating into business results.Christian's two decades in document automation have given him a front-row seat to AI's enterprise struggles. His central observation: organisations have successfully built the "brain" of AI systems but they're missing the "body." Without the orchestration layer that turns intelligence into action, even sophisticated AI remains largely useless.The conversation explores why speed alone proved insufficient. If you must review everything anyway, you haven't saved time, you've just shifted where you spend it. Christian argues this stems from unfair expectations: we wouldn't expect someone random at the coffee counter to deliver expert work with minimal context, yet that's precisely what we've expected from AI.Christian introduces "confident completion" as a framework: how complete can you be with a task, and how confident can you be in that completion? Generalist agents might reliably take you 30% of the way, whilst specialised agents with proper orchestration can push significantly further whilst maintaining trust.The orchestration layer emerges as crucial. Christian challenges the notion that users should be "pilots" of AI systems. Instead, they're passengers who know their destination. The business itself must fly the plane, controlling which models handle which tasks, what knowledge sources ground outputs, and what guardrails maintain boundaries.We discuss the shift from "content is king" to "context is king." Christian explains how providing richer context through controlled knowledge sources, understanding user intent, and applying business best practices transforms AI from impressive but unusable to genuinely trustworthy at scale.The episode offers particular relevance for education, where Christian's insights illuminate why fragmented, individual innovation attempts often struggle. Without orchestration-level thinking, even well-intentioned AI projects risk the same pitfalls: speed without quality, impressive demos without trust, and tools that create more work than they eliminate.Christian closes with honest reflections on AI ethics. Whilst championing AI's potential to eliminate non-value-creating tasks and distil vast information for better decisions, he acknowledges not having all the answers on preventing misuse. His focus: demonstrate where AI genuinely serves the greater good whilst being transparent about what responsible success requires.AI Ethics NowExploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond.A University of Warwick IATL PodcastThis podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.'This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience.Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts.We will discuss:Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountability.Societal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanity.The Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanity.If you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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5. AI and Transparency: Rethinking Assessment Through Authorship
In this episode, Ryan Bolick, adjunct assistant professor at Duke University's Pratt School of Engineering and Turing Fellow at Fuqua School of Business, discusses Byline - a writing transparency tool he founded that tracks AI and human authorship in real time.Ryan's journey began after his sister-in-law received a zero on her first undergraduate paper when AI detectors falsely claimed she'd used AI throughout - she hadn't used it at all. Combined with conversations revealing students flagged despite honest work and educators struggling with inaccurate detection tools, this led him to build a different solution.Byline doesn't guess or detect - it tracks authorship with certainty. The platform automatically shows exactly how documents come together: what users wrote, what AI suggested, what they translated, and how collaborators contributed. This addresses the finding that students avoid citing AI use even when permitted due to friction involved.The conversation explores unexpected outcomes: students actually use less AI when the process is visible. Ryan explains how seeing their own contribution helps students rediscover their voice rather than chasing "perfect ChatGPT-esque writing." The tool enables assessment of writing journeys rather than just final products, with version history revealing how students work with AI over time.We discuss collaborative writing features that show individual contributions in group work, and Ryan's interdisciplinary approach to AI policy development at Duke. The episode tackles institutional challenges: balancing professor autonomy with university policies, moving beyond "catching" students toward supportive frameworks, and staying flexible as technology evolves rapidly.Ryan concludes with a call to tool makers: understand your limitations and be transparent about them, considering both positive potential and adverse effects before release.AI Ethics NowExploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond.A University of Warwick IATL PodcastThis podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.'This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience.Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts.We will discuss:- Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountability.- Societal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanity.- The Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanity.If you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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4. AI and Creativity: What Creative Machines Teach Us About Ourselves
In this episode, Dr Maya Ackerman, computer scientist, CEO, musician, and author of the new book "Creative Machines: AI, Art and Us," explores the intersection of artificial intelligence and human creativity. This conversation with Maya challenges fundamental assumptions about machine creativity, with her arguing that the fear of AI hallucinations reveals more about human psychology than technology limitations. She contends that human thought itself is based on hallucinations (primarily our ability to predict and imagine) and that machines' imaginative capabilities make them powerful creative partners rather than threats.Together we explore how AI can expand our creative search space rather than narrow it, using examples from Maya's company WaveAI's Lyric Studio, which helps users explore unlikely lyrical possibilities. Maya also discusses the importance of "humble creative machines" that elevate human creativity rather than replace it, contrasting collaborative AI with the current trend toward "all-knowing oracle" systems.The discussion tackles contentious questions about machine creativity, consciousness, and the anthropocentric assumptions that shape our understanding of intelligence and creativity.Maya advocates for recognising that creativity is "novelty plus value" rather than emotion-dependent, arguing that evolution itself demonstrates non-emotional creative processes. She emphasises the need to move beyond collective narcissism toward genuine human-AI collaboration that enhances rather than diminishes human capabilities.The episode concludes with Maya's vision of two possible futures: one driven by greed toward unemployment and inequality, another toward collaboration, freedom, and enhanced creativity. She calls for active engagement from all stakeholders (users, builders, investors) to shape AI development toward human flourishing.Essential listening for anyone interested in creativity, consciousness, and the future of human-machine collaboration.AI Ethics NowExploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond.A University of Warwick IATL PodcastThis podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.'This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience.Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts.We will discuss:- Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountability.- Societal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanity.- The Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanity.If you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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3. AI and Education: From Teaching Tools to Teaching Thinking
In this episode, Dr Viktoria Mileva, Lecturer in Psychology and Faculty AI Lead at the University of Stirling, explores why we need to move beyond teaching students how to use AI tools towards developing critical AI literacy. Vicky argues that whilst students will naturally learn to use intuitive AI interfaces, they need deeper understanding of what's happening behind the scenes.The conversation tackles the fundamental challenge facing higher education: traditional assessments like "compare and contrast theories" no longer work when AI can complete them effectively. Vicky shares practical solutions being implemented at Stirling, including Microsoft 365 working folders that provide real-time visibility into student work processes, and the Stirling AI Assessment Scale that gives clear guidance on acceptable AI use levels.We explore the shift from "tell me what you know" to "show me how you think" assessments, discussing everything from portfolio-based evaluation to transparent AI logs. Vicky addresses the reality that 88% of UK students have used generative AI for assessments, whilst many institutions are still developing policies to catch up with student practice.The episode covers crucial ethical dimensions: environmental impact, bias, data protection, and digital equity. Vicky emphasises that students shouldn't be forced to use AI, acknowledging "conscientious objectors" who choose traditional approaches for legitimate ethical reasons.Vicky reflects on how AI is transforming the educator's role from "sage on the stage" to facilitator of critical thinking and scenario-based learning. She shares her journey of redesigning psychology modules to be more practical and student-centred, moving away from knowledge delivery towards process-based learning.The conversation addresses implementation challenges, offering practical steps for overwhelmed educators: start with frameworks, audit existing modules, seek upskilling opportunities, and borrow Creative Commons resources rather than starting from scratch.Vicky concludes with an optimistic vision of graduates equipped not just with AI skills, but as critical thinkers and global citizens prepared for an AI-integrated world.AI Ethics NowExploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond.A University of Warwick IATL PodcastThis podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.'This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience.Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts.We will discuss:- Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountability.- Societal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanity.- The Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanity.If you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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2. AI and Practice: From Principles to Real-World Solutions
In this episode, Lizbeth Chandler, Innovation Lead at Accenture and one of the top 50 people in AI ethics globally, shares her journey from accessible tech user to AI ethics pioneer. With a background spanning computer science, law, and sustainability, Lizbeth offers insights into translating ethical principles into technical solutions.Lizbeth's story begins with her personal experience of growing up with autism in a household of inventors, where her brother created adaptive technology to help her communicate. This early exposure shaped her understanding that AI ethics affects real people's lives, not abstract theory.The conversation explores her transition from founding Good Robot Company, which focuses on bias detection through counterfactual analysis, to working within Accenture's global operations. She discusses practical applications, from CV scanning bias detection to creating a privacy-preserving wellbeing robot that monitors routine and prevents burnout.We explore preparing the next generation for AI careers, the importance of interdisciplinary skills, and why scaling solutions matters more than just invention. Lizbeth advocates for global perspectives on AI development and genuine collaboration between academia and industry.The episode demonstrates how ethical considerations can be embedded in design and why "technology is never neutral," but rather, reflects the values of those who build it.AI Ethics NowExploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond.A University of Warwick IATL PodcastThis podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.'This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience.Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts.We will discuss:- Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountability.- Societal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanity.- The Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanity.If you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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1. AI and Students: What Universities Don't Know
In this first episode of season two, Yanyan Li, Meifang Zhuo, and Gunisha Aggarwal, three researchers from the University of Warwick, share findings from their WIHEA-funded study exploring how university students actually use AI in their academic work. Not what institutions think they should do, but what they're really doing.Through focus groups with Warwick students, their research reveals a complex picture that challenges assumptions about academic integrity and educational fairness. Students describe using AI as "strategic efficiency" tools - getting summaries before reading, help with essay structure, and grammar assistance - whilst simultaneously acknowledging risks of cognitive laziness and reduced social interaction with peers.The conversation explores AI's double-edged nature in education. Whilst serving as a vital equaliser for international students overcoming language barriers and neurodiverse learners managing cognitive demands, it's simultaneously creating new educational inequalities based on access to premium versions and technical literacy in prompting.Perhaps most striking is the policy disconnect: despite Warwick having detailed AI guidance, the overwhelming majority of focus group participants weren't aware formal policies existed. This leads to widespread underreporting of AI use - not from dishonesty, but from confusion about what's acceptable and fear of unconscious bias against AI users.The researchers advocate for moving beyond blanket institutional policies towards detailed, module-specific guidance. They argue universities should provide AI access as a basic resource, comparing ChatGPT subscriptions to library access, whilst helping students develop intentional, ethical approaches to AI use.We explore how 66% of employers now seek AI literacy skills, the environmental concerns students raise about AI use, and the fundamental question of maintaining human connection in an increasingly automated academic world.Essential listening for educators, policymakers, and anyone interested in authentic student perspectives on AI in higher education.AI Ethics NowExploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond.A University of Warwick IATL PodcastThis podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.'This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience.Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts.We will discuss:- Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountability.- Societal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanity.- The Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanity.If you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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20. AI and Copyright: Navigating Creative Technology's Legal Challenges
In this final episode of the first season, Liesl Rowe, Senior Digital Library Advisor and copyright expert at Leeds Beckett University, demystifies one of the most complex aspects of AI adoption: copyright law. As AI tools become increasingly accessible, understanding the legal landscape becomes crucial for educators, students, and creators alike.Liesl explores the fundamental challenge that's often overlooked in AI discussions: the difference between AI inputs and outputs, and why the former poses far greater copyright risks. While many institutions focus on citing AI-generated content, the real legal minefield lies in what we feed into these systems. She explains how feeding copyrighted material into AI models without permission essentially grants unauthorised access to large language models - a practice that's putting creators and institutions at risk.The conversation covers practical institutional responses, from Leeds Beckett's ethics procedure requiring AI use declaration to Leeds University's traffic light system (red: no AI, amber: optional, green: encouraged). Liesl discusses how the UK government's policy u-turn on text and data mining exemptions has left creators scrambling to protect their work, leading to widespread "do not input" declarations from publishers.We explore the ethical dimensions of AI training data, including the uncomfortable reality that many models are built on "shadow libraries" of illegally downloaded content, and the bias challenges created by predominantly anglophone training data. Liesl passionately argues for inclusive AI development, noting how criticism of AI often overlooks who benefits most: non-native English speakers using translation tools, and neurodiverse individuals who find AI invaluable for tasks like email composition and content summarisation.The episode tackles authorship in the age of AI, referencing the famous "selfie monkey" case that established human-only copyright law, while noting India's recent departure from this standard. Liesl concludes with optimism, highlighting emerging research from Swansea University showing AI's genuine strengths in specific analysis and summarisation, advocating for more intentional, tool-appropriate AI deployment.A must-listen for anyone navigating the intersection of creativity, technology, and law in education and beyond.AI Ethics NowExploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond.A University of Warwick IATL PodcastThis podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.'This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience.Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts.We will discuss:- Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountability.- Societal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanity.- The Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanity.If you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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19. AI and Enterprise: Building Innovation Beyond the Hype
In this episode, John Mills, research and innovation expert turned entrepreneur, cuts through the AI hype to explore what really drives successful enterprise adoption. With 14 years of experience working with emerging technologies at the University of Central Lancashire and recent transition to running his own AI consultancy for newsrooms, John offers a unique perspective on innovation in practice.Rather than getting caught up in "either utopia or doom" narratives, John focuses on the fundamental characteristics that make entrepreneurs and organisations successful with AI. He explores the importance of calculated risk-taking, having a clear "why" beyond just making money, and developing organisational "ambidexterity" - the ability to excel at core missions while experimenting with new opportunities.The conversation delves into a fascinating case study from Danish tabloid publisher Ekstra Bladet, who tackled AI uncertainty using innovative "three horizons" planning - from 6-month tactical implementations to 5-year future-scoping with university partners. John explains how they measured success differently across each horizon, accepting uncertainty while maintaining strategic direction.We explore the critical challenge facing all organisations: translation - moving from "what can AI do?" to "what does this mean for us?" John draws on his journalism background to discuss why trust remains the cornerstone of any AI strategy, particularly in media where credibility can be lost in seconds.The discussion spans practical applications from newsroom automation to drone technology in dangerous environments, always returning to the central theme that successful AI adoption is fundamentally about people - understanding stakeholder needs, concerns, and opportunities rather than chasing technological novelty.John's pragmatic approach reminds us that "it's just computers doing computer stuff" - but the real innovation lies in thoughtful application that serves communities and creates genuine value.AI Ethics Now Exploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond. A University of Warwick IATL Podcast This podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.' This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience. Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts. We will discuss: - Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountability. - Societal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanity. - The Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanity. If you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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18. AI and Learning: What HE Can Discover from FE Innovation
In this episode, Philippa (Pip) Armstrong, Digital Innovation Development Coach at Nottingham College, demonstrates how Further Education's collaborative culture offers valuable lessons for Higher Education's approach to AI integration. Rather than banning or tiptoeing around generative AI, Nottingham College has drawn a clear "line in the sand" with their innovative approach that other sectors can learn from.Pip introduces their "ACE" framework - Approach Cautiously and Ethically - and explains how they've created a culture of mindful AI use through transparency, support, and education. We explore their comprehensive strategy including rolling CPD programmes, dedicated Digital Innovation Development Coaches for each faculty, and their AI assessment scale that gives clear guidance on appropriate AI use levels.The conversation covers practical implementations that could be adapted across educational contexts: from English students creating their own AI images for creative writing tasks, to tutors using AI as teaching assistants to rejuvenate their practice. Pip shares how they're developing AI literacy across the entire college community, including resources for parents and caregivers of younger students - an approach HE institutions might consider for their broader stakeholder engagement.We discuss the challenges of balancing innovation with ethics, the importance of maintaining "humans in the loop," and how they're preparing students not just for jobs, but for a world where distinguishing human from machine-generated content becomes increasingly difficult. Pip's infectious enthusiasm for AI as a force for good shines through, whilst acknowledging legitimate concerns about over-reliance and the need for critical evaluation.The episode highlights how FE's tradition of sharing best practice and collaborative problem-solving offers a model for cross-sector learning in the rapidly evolving AI landscape.AI Ethics Now Exploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond. A University of Warwick IATL Podcast This podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.' This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience. Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts. We will discuss: - Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountability. - Societal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanity. - The Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanity. If you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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17. AI and the Wrath of Khan't: From Technology Panics to Solar Punk Futures
In this episode, Stephen Taylor from Regent's University London unpacks our historical tendency to panic about new technologies - from the Luddites destroying textile machinery to farmers blocking tractors, and now AI systems. As Learning Technology Lead, Stephen occupies what he terms the 'third space,' straddling academic and professional services to offer a unique vantage point on technological adoption.Using Bourdieu's habitus as our starting point, we examine how society's collective experiences programme our fearful responses to innovation, whilst media outlets amplify anxieties for headlines. Stephen draws a crucial distinction between AI and search engines: whilst Google provides answers, AI serves as an ideation partner for creative exploration. He doesn't shy away from discussing thorny issues like cultural bias in training data and the risk of 'algorithmic colonisation.'Rather than standing as obstacles to progress, Stephen urges us to climb into the driver's seat of technological change. His 'solar punk' vision - inspired by Star Trek's utopian future - imagines AI enhancing rather than replacing human creativity. We discuss practical applications like Goblin Tools for neurodivergent users, whilst addressing serious concerns about AI's environmental footprint and equitable representation.Stephen leaves us with the thought that by delegating mundane tasks to AI, we might actually become 'more human' - free to pursue creative and meaningful work that defines our humanity.AI Ethics Now Exploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond. A University of Warwick IATL Podcast This podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.' This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience. Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts. We will discuss: - Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountability. - Societal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanity. - The Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanity. If you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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16. AI and Education: The Quiet Revolution in Learning Technology
In this episode, we chat with Graham Atwell, Director of Pontydysgu and Honorary Associate Professor at Warwick University's Institute for Employment Research. With over nine years of experience working with AI in education, Graham offers a refreshingly candid perspective on the current AI landscape. We explore his views on the most exciting recent AI advancements, particularly in language translation tools and small but impactful time-saving applications. Graham shares his concerns about job displacement, corporate dominance in AI development, and the "black box" problem of unexplainable AI. Our discussion highlights the need for interdisciplinary approaches to AI development, greater university leadership in AI research, and the importance of involving workers, unions, and communities in shaping how AI is implemented. Graham encourages students to get involved with AI in their specific disciplines while maintaining a critical perspective, emphasizing that we should focus on how AI can be used for societal good rather than corporate profit.AI Ethics Now Exploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond. A University of Warwick IATL Podcast This podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.' This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience. Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts. We will discuss: - Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountability. - Societal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanity. - The Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanity. If you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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15. AI and Innovation: Bridging Startups and Education
In this episode, we speak with Randeep Wilkhu, tech entrepreneur and founder of AI company Finden. With 22+ years of experience in the tech industry, including roles as a developer, venture capitalist, and startup founder, Randeep brings valuable insights on AI innovation. We discuss the characteristics of successful AI entrepreneurs, how his technical background provides an advantage in the AI space, and his work mentoring at Warwick Business School. Our conversation explores Finden's privacy-first approach to personal data management, the challenges universities face in adopting AI, and why small and medium-sized businesses may benefit most from AI innovation. Randeep shares thoughts on how government, businesses, and educational institutions can collaborate more effectively to create "playground" environments for AI experimentation while addressing privacy concerns and outdated educational frameworks.AI Ethics Now Exploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond. A University of Warwick IATL Podcast This podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.' This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience. Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts. We will discuss: - Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountability. - Societal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanity. - The Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanity. If you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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14. AI and Academic Integrity: Reimagining Education Through Innovation
In this episode, we speak with Helen Hope, who leads academic integrity initiatives at the University of Worcester. With extensive experience in both higher education and secondary schools, Helen brings valuable insights from across educational sectors. We discuss how the emergence of generative AI in late 2022 disrupted established academic integrity practices, and how Helen has since led a university-wide group exploring AI integration across teaching, assessment, and institutional processes. Our conversation examines practical applications of AI for teachers, particularly in reducing planning time and supporting neurodiverse students. Helen references Sir Ken Robinson's critique of traditional education models, suggesting AI could be a catalyst for rethinking age-based learning. We explore challenges around academic integrity, resistance to technological adoption, and the potential of AI to address complex problems like student retention. Helen shares her vision for education that embraces technology while maintaining human connection, and offers three key steps for ensuring AI benefits humanity.AI Ethics Now Exploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond. A University of Warwick IATL Podcast This podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.' This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience. Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts. We will discuss: - Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountability. - Societal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanity. - The Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanity. If you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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13. AI and Transformation: Industry Insights for Higher Education
In this episode, we speak with Raja Javaid, Chief Information and Transformation Officer at the University of Warwick. With 20+ years of experience in the private sector at companies like Dixons, Boots, and Rolls-Royce, Raja brings a unique cross-industry perspective to AI in education. We discuss the "iPhone moment" of generative AI, Warwick's new AI Centre of Excellence, and how the university is developing ethical frameworks based on OECD principles. Our conversation explores the balance between AI advancement and human values, examining challenges of bias, explainability, and sustainability. Raja shares insights on how universities can responsibly integrate AI while maintaining the human elements that make education meaningful.AI Ethics Now Exploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond. A University of Warwick IATL Podcast This podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.' This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience. Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts. We will discuss: - Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountability. - Societal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanity. - The Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanity. If you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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12. AI and Education: The Human-AI Partnership
In this episode, we explore AI in education with University of Chester experts, Dr Katharine Welsh and Laura Milne. Katharine, an Associate Professor and University Innovation Fellow, and Laura, Head of Digital Education, lead their institution's AI and Education Working Group. They share insights on how they are working to responsibly integrate AI into their higher education context. Our conversation examines balancing AI's potential with challenges of sustainability, bias, and data privacy. We also discuss the "black box" nature of AI, changing assessment practices, and the importance of human judgment. Finally, we explore how universities can build AI literacy while ensuring equitable access and reducing environmental impact.AI Ethics Now Exploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond. A University of Warwick IATL Podcast This podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.' This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience. Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts. We will discuss: - Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountability. - Societal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanity. - The Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanity. If you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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11. AI and Social Justice: Decolonising Digital Knowledge
In this episode, we explore the complex relationship between AI, social justice, and education with Dr Gurnam Singh, Honorary Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Warwick. Drawing from his extensive background in anti-racism, decoloniality, and pedagogical research, Dr Singh examines how AI systems intersect with existing social inequities. The conversation unpacks critical questions about bias in AI, from the limitations of training data in capturing diverse human knowledge to the potential for AI to either reinforce or challenge systemic inequalities. Dr Singh brings a unique sociological perspective to discussions of human intelligence versus artificial intelligence, exploring how AI tools might be harnessed for social justice while acknowledging their limitations. The discussion extends to practical considerations for education, examining how AI could potentially democratise access to knowledge while raising important questions about the nature of learning, creativity, and human consciousness in an AI-enhanced world.AI Ethics Now Exploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond. A University of Warwick IATL Podcast This podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.' This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience. Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts. We will discuss: - Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountability. - Societal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanity. - The Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanity. If you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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10. AI and Ethics in Practice: Corporate Perspectives
In this episode, we delve into the critical intersection of AI ethics and corporate responsibility with Ganesan Keerthivasan and Tom Tirpak from ZealStrat, a strategic management consulting firm. Our guests bring unique perspectives: Ganesan, an MD-turned-CEO with a background in healthcare, and Tom, an electrical engineering PhD with extensive experience in AI implementation across multiple industries. They explore five key ethical considerations for AI development, including bias and fairness, privacy concerns, transparency, human-AI collaboration, and security risks. The conversation examines how businesses, individuals, and governments can work together to create responsible AI systems, drawing insights from emerging standards like the IEEE AI ethics framework and the EU's AI Act. The discussion emphasizes the urgent need for proactive ethical governance in AI development to avoid the regulatory challenges faced by previous technologies like social media. AI Ethics Now Exploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond. A University of Warwick IATL Podcast This podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.' This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience. Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts. We will discuss: - Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountability. - Societal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanity. - The Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanity. If you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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9. AI and Consciousness: The Human Condition
In this episode, we will begin to explore the intriguing world of consciousness and artificial intelligence with Professor Anil Seth, a renowned expert in cognitive and computational neuroscience. Professor Seth, whose research spans AI, neuroscience, and philosophy, offers a unique perspective on the ethical dimensions of AI. We examine the possibility of artificial consciousness, the impact of AI on our understanding of human consciousness, and the ethical considerations surrounding AI systems that mimic human-like qualities, such as language and emotion.AI Ethics Now Exploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond. A University of Warwick IATL Podcast This podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.' This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience. Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts. We will discuss: - Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountability. - Societal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanity. - The Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanity. If you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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8. AI and the Future of Work: Unlocking Productivity
This week, we explore the exciting potential of AI in the workplace with Daniella Latham, Principal Product Marketing Manager at Atlassian. Daniella shares her perspective and expertise on the impact AI has on knowledge workers and ethical implications in business - from entrepreneurs and start-ups to big enterprises. AI Ethics Now Exploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond. A University of Warwick IATL Podcast This podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.' This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience. Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts. We will discuss: - Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountability. - Societal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanity. - The Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanity. If you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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7. AI and Human Rights: Why are Robots always white?
This week, we delve into the critical intersection of AI and human rights. Our guest, Imogen Canavan, is a legal consultant working on the front lines of refugee protection. With her expertise in human rights and her experience supporting individuals fleeing persecution, Imogen provides invaluable insights into the potential impacts of AI on refugees and the importance of ensuring that these technologies are used ethically and responsibly. Tune in to this important conversation! AI Ethics Now Exploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond. A University of Warwick IATL Podcast This podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.' This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience. Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts. We will discuss: - Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountability. - Societal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanity. - The Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanity. If you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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6. AI and Education: Ethical Dilemmas and Design Thinking Solutions
This week we are joined by Pavan Konanur, CEO and Co-Founder of Hoja AI, an educational AI start up. Pavan discusses the concepts of AI, Innovation, and Design Thinking. AI Ethics Now Exploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond. A University of Warwick IATL Podcast This podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.' This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience. Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts. We will discuss: - Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountability. - Societal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanity. - The Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanity. If you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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5. AI and Policy: Health, Wealth, and Universal Human Happiness
In this episode, Smera Jayadeva, a Researcher at the Alan Turing Institute and Visiting Researcher at the Digital Environment Research Institute, joins us to discuss critical issues in AI ethics and responsible innovation AI Ethics Now Exploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond. A University of Warwick IATL Podcast This podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.' This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience. Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts. We will discuss: - Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountability. - Societal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanity. - The Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanity. If you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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4. AI and Governments: The Revolution in Telecommunications
This week, we chat with Dr. Chris Murphy, Regional CTO, EMEA at VIAVI Solutions, and a member of the UK Telecom Innovation Network. He discusses the opportunities and threats of AI in the UK telecoms industry AI Ethics Now Exploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond. A University of Warwick IATL Podcast This podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.' This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience. Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts. We will discuss: - Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountability. - Societal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanity. - The Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanity. If you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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3. AI and Decoloniality: What could possibly go wrong?
This week, we're joined by Dr Sanjay Sharma, Associate Professor in the Centre for Interdisciplinary Methodologies at the University of Warwick. Sanjay's sector-leading work on technologies of race and racism, drawing from critical data justice, decolonial, and abolitionist perspectives, provides crucial insights into the potential harms of AI. AI Ethics Now Exploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond. A University of Warwick IATL Podcast This podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.' This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience. Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts. We will discuss: - Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountability. - Societal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanity. - The Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanity. If you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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2. AI and Education: The Future of AI-Powered Learning
This week, we explore the exciting potential of AI in education with Dr Lynne Taylerson, Director and Lead Trainer at Real Time Education. Lynne, also a researcher in learning technology and a consultant for an AI design organisation, shares her insights on creating engaging learning spaces powered by AI. Join us for a conversation about the future of education. AI Ethics Now Exploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond. A University of Warwick IATL Podcast This podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.' This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience. Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts. We will discuss: - Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountability. - Societal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanity. - The Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanity. If you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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1. The AI Revolution: AI and the Future of Humanity
This week on AI Ethics Now, we're joined by Andrew Maynard, Professor of Advanced Technology Transitions at Arizona State University, a leading voice on the future of humanity. Professor Maynard has increasingly focused his research on the responsible development of AI, exploring the ethical, social, and environmental implications of this transformative technology. A renowned commentator on the future of humanity, Professor Maynard brings a unique perspective to the challenges and opportunities presented by the rapid advancement of AI. AI Ethics Now Exploring the ethical dilemmas of AI in Higher Education and beyond. A University of Warwick IATL Podcast This podcast series was developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills, the module leads of the IATL module "The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society" at the University of Warwick. The AI Revolution module explores the history, current state, and potential futures of artificial intelligence, examining its profound impact on society, individuals, and the very definition of 'humanness.' This podcast was initially designed to provide a deeper dive into the key themes explored each week in class. We want to share the discussions we have had to help offer a broader, interdisciplinary perspective on the ethical and societal implications of artificial intelligence to a wider audience. Join each fortnight for new critical conversations on AI Ethics with local, national, and international experts. We will discuss: - Ethical Dimensions of AI: Fairness, bias, transparency, and accountability. - Societal Implications: How AI is transforming industries, economies, and our understanding of humanity. - The Future of AI: Potential benefits, risks, and shaping a future where AI serves humanity. If you want to join the podcast as a guest, contact [email protected].
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
AI Ethics Now is a podcast dedicated to exploring the complex issues surrounding artificial intelligence from a non-specialist perspective, including bias, ethics, privacy, and accountability. Join us as we discuss the challenges and opportunities of AI and work towards a future where technology benefits society as a whole. This podcast was first developed by Dr Tom Ritchie and Dr Jennie Mills as part of The AI Revolution: Ethics, Technology, and Society module, taught as part of IATL at the University of Warwick.
HOSTED BY
Tom Ritchie, Jennie Mills, IATL, WIHEA, University of Warwick
CATEGORIES
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