Summary:
Gabriela Bar, a legal expert specializing in AI law and ethics, talks about how AI is shaping legal frameworks, societal perceptions, and technological innovations – especially within Europe and Poland. She discusses the importance of responsible AI governance, the evolving legal landscape, and the societal implications of AI deployment at scale. The discussion with Anastassia touches on compliance costs to implement the EU AI Act, practices to introduce national LLMs, and what constitutes responsible AI.
Gabriela Bar is a prominent legal expert specializing in technology and artificial intelligence law, based in Poland. She has over 20 years of experience and is the founder of the Gabriela Bar Law & AI firm, serving as a legal and ethics advisor for EU technology projects focused on AI, digital law, and compliance with regulations such as the EU AI Act and GDPR. She is recognized among the TOP100 Women in AI in Poland, Forbes 25 Women in Business Law, and is active in several international organizations dedicated to technology, digital ethics, and law. Gabriela Bar frequently lectures at universities, publishes on AI law and ethics, and advises technology companies and research consortia on responsible and practical AI innovation.
Key Topics:
Gabriela’s journey from technology law to AI ethics and her ongoing work within European AI regulation.
The rapid growth of AI adoption in Polish businesses and public sector initiatives for language models.
The challenges and opportunities of implementing responsible AI, including transparency, accountability, and bias mitigation.
The role of AI legislation, with a focus on the European AI Act, regulatory costs, and how it balances innovation with safeguards.
The global landscape of AI regulation, contrasting EU's comprehensive approach with the US decentralized system.
Technical limitations of deep learning models, explainability, and the importance of aligning AI development with ethical principles.
The future of AI in cybersecurity, digital personas, and the geopolitics of AI competitiveness among the US, EU, and China.
Chapters:
00:04 - Introduction to Gabriela and AI in Poland
02:55 - How Gabriela transitioned from traditional law to technology and AI
04:03 - Cultural portrayals of AI and public perceptions influenced by movies and literature
07:49 - Misinformation and misconceptions about AI technology today
09:17 - The private sector’s role in AI development and application in Poland
10,:54 - Demographic challenges in Poland and AI’s potential role in mitigating them
13:45 - Political and regulatory gaps in AI, and the importance of cross-sector integration
15:38 - The absence of national LLMs in languages like Japanese; success stories from other countries
18:01 - Foundations of responsible and ethical AI: core principles and risk management
21:51 - Data quality, biases, and ongoing governance in AI lifecycle management
22:53 - The flaws in deep learning transparency and the necessity for cautious regulation
29:34 - Legal accountability, the role of audits, and fairness in AI systems
33:34 - The evolving landscape of AI litigation and insurance implications
36:14 - Regulatory costs for AI companies and the competitive landscape in Europe
39:03 - The scope of the European AI Act and its impacts on high-risk sectors
42:49 - Cybersecurity risks involving AI, criminal misuse, and the importance of legal safeguards
44:08 - Europe's strategic imperative in AI sovereignty amid global technology race
46:39 - The contrasting regulatory systems of the US and China and their influence on innovation
51:17 - The emerging need for regulation of digital personas and synthetic media
51:35 - Wrapping up: key takeaways and the importance of dialogue between tech developers, policymakers, and society
Resources & Links:
Gabriela Bar - LinkedIn | Twitter
Anastassia Lauterbach - LinkedIn
