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  • Weapon, wonder or both? Political framings of AI in global north and south media – Information, Communication & Society

    ‘As artificial intelligence (AI) is increasingly understood as a political infrastructure and a decision-making technology with the potential to reshape institutions and reconfigure power relations, media coverage plays a key role in shaping public understanding of its risks and opportunities. This study examines how mainstream media outlets in the Global North and Global South politically…

    sally
    June 30, 2026

  • The First Company-Wide AI Ban Just Hit My Inbox. Here’s What It Means – Inc.

    ‘AI buyer’s remorse is starting to creep into the ROI equation.’ Link: https://www.inc.com/joe-procopio/the-first-company-wide-ai-ban-just-hit-my-inbox-heres-what-it-means/91357535

    sally
    June 29, 2026

  • Resisting the Echo Chamber: AI-Assisted Judgment Writing and the Risk of Homogenization – Slaw

    ‘Artificial intelligence is making its way into courtrooms around the world, and not always for the better. Judges have been caught embedding AI-generated fictitious case references in judicial decisions, in Canada and internationally; and there are no doubt other, more subtle, machine delusions slipping into case law undetected. Judicial misuse of AI tools has profound consequences for the…

    sally
    June 26, 2026

  • Episode 161 – Seeing Isn’t Believing: Deepfakes and Evidence with Yvonne McDermott Rees and Anne Hausknecht – asymmetrical haircuts

    ‘Can judges still believe the evidence presented to them? How do courts deal with deepfakes and AI-altered images? Those are but some of the questions we’re asking this week as we dive further into our AI series, and look at what deepfakes and AI mean for international courts.’ Link: https://www.asymmetricalhaircuts.com/episodes/episode-161-seeing-isnt-believing-deepfakes-and-evidence-with-yvonne-mcdermott-rees-and-anne-hausknecht/

    sally
    June 26, 2026

  • AI Hiring Tools Can Yield Racial Bias and Systemic Rejection – Stanford University

    ‘The first large-scale study of hiring algorithms in the wild finds concerning patterns to how systems reject candidates.’ Link: https://hai.stanford.edu/news/ai-hiring-tools-can-yield-racial-bias-and-systemic-rejection

    sally
    June 26, 2026

  • Immigration law Q&A – Free Movement

    ‘This experimental research tool seeks the most relevant passages of the current versions of Home Office policy, highlights quotes and generates an AI summary of the passages found, with links straight to the relevant section of the policy on gov.uk. It suggests follow-up questions and allows you to ask your own follow-ups as well. The…

    sally
    June 24, 2026

  • EU AI Act: Code of Practice on marking and labelling AI-generated content – Addleshaw Goddard

    ‘The EU AI Act’s transparency obligations for providers and deployers of generative AI become applicable on 2 August 2026, although the AI Omnibus has introduced a grace period until 2 December 2026 for systems placed on the market or put into service before 2 August 2026. The European Commission has recently published a voluntary Code of Practice on…

    sally
    June 24, 2026

  • Robots Behaving Badly: Algorithmic Colonialism and the Consequences of AI – Journal of Sociology

    ‘This article examines the political, social, and relational consequences of artificial intelligence through an anti-colonial and Indigenous lens. Challenging claims that AI is neutral or inevitable, we show that it is embedded in settler-colonial, racialised, and gendered power structures. Across predictive policing, facial recognition, automated welfare, deepfake sexual violence, and embodied robotics, AI does not…

    sally
    June 24, 2026

  • Workday accused of AI bias in job screening, faces California lawsuit over employment tech – TechRadar

    ‘During a June 2026 hearing, Judge Rita Lin implied she might be likely to reject Workday’s latest attempt to dismiss claims brought under California law relating to a 2023 discrimination case.’ Link: https://www.techradar.com/pro/workday-accused-of-ai-bias-in-job-screening-faces-california-lawsuit-over-employment-tech

    sally
    June 24, 2026

  • Collective Actions and the uses of AI – Society for Computers and Law

    ‘The UK’s collective actions regime is entering a period of both rapid expansion and transformation. According to the Competition Appeal Tribunal and Competition Service Annual Report, the Tribunal issued 76 judgments and made 475 orders in the year ending March 2024, with 268 cases carried forward into the next year, reflecting a significant increase in both…

    sally
    June 24, 2026

  • Who’s Suing Whom in AI? – David McCandless Information is Beautiful

    ‘Notable copyright infringement cases from over 100 lawsuits.’ Link: https://informationisbeautiful.net/visualizations/the-rise-of-generative-ai-large-language-models-llms-like-chatgpt/#suing

    sally
    June 24, 2026

  • Generation Z Aren’t Sold On AI, And It’s Limiting Enterprise Adoption – Forbes

    ‘Generation Z exhibits a complex relationship with AI, often booing leaders who praise it, reflecting deep anxieties about job displacement and other societal impacts. Studies show 48% of working Gen Zers believe AI risks outweigh benefits, with 44% admitting to sabotaging company AI strategies. This opposition stems from fears of job loss, intellectual property concerns,…

    sally
    June 24, 2026

  • Drowning in AI: Companies are launching hundreds of projects, and that’s a problem – Fortune

    ‘Managers and employees alike have gotten the message: AI is part of their job, and it’s time to embrace it. That’s the good news. The bad news is that, even as AI adoption is supposed to create efficiency, it can also do the opposite as dozens of teams and individuals stand up AI initiatives that…

    sally
    June 24, 2026

  • The Risk of Relying on AI Lawyers – American Bar Association

    ‘In today’s world, many tech companies use artificial intelligence (AI) to develop legal tools. These tools are available to the public, just as AI is being used in areas such as customer service and medical diagnosis.’ Link: https://www.americanbar.org/groups/law_practice/resources/law-technology-today/2026/the-risk-of-relying-on-ai-lawyers/

    sally
    June 24, 2026

  • Senior judge warns of dangers of ‘gradual drift’ towards AI justice – The Justice Gap

    ‘A senior judge has warned of the dangers of the use of artificial intelligence in the legal system as she says justice is threatened by fake evidence, invented case law and the potential for judicial bias.’ Link: https://www.thejusticegap.com/senior-judge-warns-of-dangers-of-gradual-drift-towards-ai-justice/

    sally
    June 23, 2026

  • HR consultant wins English court case using AI lawyer in apparent legal first – The Guardian

    ‘An artificial intelligence law firm has won a case in an English court, in what is believed to be the first time a trial has been won using an AI lawyer.’ Link: https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2026/jun/22/artificial-intelligence-law-firm-wins-court-case-in-england-for-first-time

    sally
    June 23, 2026

  • The agency gap: perceived human AI agency, reflection and generative AI learning across UK and China based higher education contexts – Studies in Higher Education

    ‘Generative AI is now common in higher education, and its rise prompts questions about how students shape their own learning, including the cognitive effort involved. Rather than assuming a binary debate between cheating and assistance, we examine perceived Human-AI agency, understood empirically as students’ reported initiative, monitoring of AI outputs and final decision making in AI supported learning.…

    sally
    June 19, 2026

  • AI Scenarios 2030: Helping policymakers plan for the future of AI – Government Office for Science

    ‘Artificial intelligence (AI) has advanced rapidly over the past decade. The most advanced AI systems have shifted from laboratory curiosities to those beginning to reshape our world. They have already transformed fields such as software development and cybersecurity, and millions of ordinary people now use them throughout their day.’ Link: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/ai-scenarios-2030-helping-policymakers-plan-for-the-future-of-ai/ai-scenarios-2030-helping-policymakers-plan-for-the-future-of-ai

    sally
    June 19, 2026

  • What Should Law Firms Do Before Deploying Copilot? – American Bar Association

    ‘Most law firms evaluating Microsoft Copilot are asking the right questions. Which practice groups should pilot it first? What should the acceptable use policy say? How do we make sure attorneys get value without creating new risk? Those conversations matter.’ Link: https://www.americanbar.org/groups/law_practice/resources/law-technology-today/2026/what-should-law-firms-do-before-deploying-copilot/

    sally
    June 16, 2026

  • Groundbreaking test finds AI judges “too persuadable” – Legal Futures

    ‘A groundbreaking test of how persuadable an AI judge can be has raised serious concerns about access to justice and miscarriages of justice.’ Link: https://www.legalfutures.co.uk/latest-news/groundbreaking-test-finds-ai-judges-are-too-persuadable

    sally
    June 15, 2026

  • LSB exposes “expectation-reality gap” with legal AI – Legal Futures

    ‘Consumers expect a lawyer to oversee the information and advice that artificial intelligence (AI) provides, major new research has found.’ Link: https://www.legalfutures.co.uk/latest-news/lsb-exposes-expectation-reality-gap-with-legal-ai

    sally
    June 12, 2026

  • Copyright law ‘struggling’ to parse AI’s ascendancy – Harvard Law Today

    ‘Deferring hard decisions about which kinds of machine-assisted creative works can be copyrighted over nearly 250 years has made it harder to ascertain whether works produced with the help of artificial intelligence can receive legal protection, according to Harvard Law School Professor Rebecca Tushnet.’ Link: https://hls.harvard.edu/today/copyright-law-struggling-to-parse-ais-ascendancy/

    sally
    June 12, 2026

  • AI in the Courtroom – Kingsley Napley Regulatory Blog

    ‘In this blog, we consider how AI is being used in courts and tribunals by both legal representatives and litigants in person. Over the last 12 months, there has been a developing body of judgments handed down where the use of AI has been referenced as creating an issue in the hearing. These cases typically…

    sally
    June 12, 2026

  • Myths About Generative AI, Productivity, and Job Displacement – Hanna, Park & Song

    ‘One of the strongest corporate arguments in favor of the widespread adoption of generative AI tools–including large language models (LLMs), text-to-image, and text-to-video models which underlie systems like OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Anthropic’s Claude–has been the promise of a productivity boon for firms. The argument is that, because they are able to generate realistic-sounding text and…

    sally
    June 12, 2026

  • Lady chief justice commends AI usage by litigants in person – Law Society’s Gazette

    ‘Judges have found AI-assistant submissions from litigants in person ‘more helpful’ than submissions drafted without AI support, the lady chief justice revealed during her annual evidence session before the Constitution Committee today.’ Link: https://www.lawgazette.co.uk/news/lady-chief-justice-commends-ai-usage-by-litigants-in-person/5127021.article

    sally
    June 12, 2026

  • UK democracy under ‘immense strain’ with just 3% of voters able to tell if a video is real or AI, charity warns – The Independent

    ‘UK democracy is under “immense and increasing strain” because of disinformation increasingly being spread by artificial intelligence (AI), with just 3 per cent of the public able to very easily tell if a video online is genuine.’ Link: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/ai-election-makerfield-full-fact-b2990452.html

    sally
    June 9, 2026

  • The Ghost in the Machine: AI Hallucinations and the New Frontier of Professional Negligence – Gatehouse Chambers

    ‘The rapid integration of Artificial Intelligence (AI) into legal practice is no longer a futuristic concept; it is an everyday reality. For solicitors specializing in professional negligence, this technological shift represents a fertile new battleground. The recent High Court decision in Re an Office-Holder; Cork v Smith EWHC 1199 (Ch) provides a stark warning about the perils…

    sally
    June 9, 2026

  • Government to introduce AI ‘legal assistants’ in courts to cut rising case backlog – The Independent

    ‘Artificial intelligence-powered virtual legal assistants are set to be introduced across Crown Courts in the UK, the government has announced, in a bid to alleviate the mounting backlog of cases. Ministers assert that the new technology will significantly accelerate legal proceedings.’ Link: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/ai-crown-courts-uk-backlog-b2992190.html

    sally
    June 9, 2026

  • Reviewing The Leveson Review Part 2: Marking the techno-optimistic turn in criminal justice reform – IALS

    ‘On the 4th Feb 2026, Leveson’s Independent Review Part 2 was released. There is no doubt, this is a difficult read because of its substance and style. I want to comment upon its style before making my central claim: this work marks a worrisome turn in criminal justice reform towards techno-optimism. In making this claim, this short…

    sally
    June 5, 2026

  • Regulators hit by wave of fake AI case law – The Times (£)

    ‘Legal regulators are dealing with growing numbers of allegations of lawyers having used artificial intelligence before citing false or hallucinated authorities in court.’ Link: https://www.thetimes.com/uk/law/article/regulators-hit-by-wave-of-fake-ai-case-law-0z78jmjkh

    sally
    June 5, 2026

  • Critical approaches to AI and accessibility capacity building: Insights from the second AI and Accessibility Skills Workshop – University of Southampton

    ‘In February 2026, the second ‘AI and Accessibility Skills’ workshop was attended by participants from higher education, industry, policy, governance and research organisations. Three presentations followed opening remarks by Dr Howard Leicester; Prof. Hannah Morgan examined how AI and digital accessibility practices are shaping disability futures; Henny Swan explored how AI is transforming accessibility work…

    sally
    June 5, 2026

  • A uni professor admitted using AI to write an opinion piece. Here’s what it revealed about trust in the technology – The Guardian

    ‘Without disclosing that work has been generated using the technology, faith in existing industries will continue to be undermined.’ Link: https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2026/jun/05/trust-in-ai-roy-morgan-australia-university-professor-opinion-piece-technology

    sally
    June 5, 2026

  • National AI rules needed to protect civil liberties, JUSTICE warns in latest podcast – JUSTICE

    ‘In the latest episode of the Law for Lawmakers podcast, JUSTICE explores the challenges of protecting rights as the use of artificial intelligence spreads throughout society.’  Link: https://justice.org.uk/news/national-ai-rules-needed-to-protect-civil-liberties-justice-warns-in-latest-podcast

    sally
    June 4, 2026

  • AI ready: how to prepare archives for Artificial Intelligence, improve discoverability, and enhance access – Archives and Records

    ‘Artificial Intelligence (AI) and machine learning offer significant potential for archives: they can help identify sensitive content at scale, support the creation and enhancement of descriptive metadata, and enable new forms of access and interpretation. Yet AI also risks compounding long-standing challenges around archival description, bias, and power, especially where collections are fragmentary, under-described, or…

    sally
    June 4, 2026

  • Dark Patterns in AI Chatbots: A Taxonomy to Inform Better Design – Center for Democracy and Technology

    ‘As AI chatbots become widely adopted for functional, social, and emotional use, concerns around how their design impacts user interaction and wellbeing are growing. While early research highlights potential benefits from chatbots — such as reduced loneliness and increased perceived support — it also raises concerns, including possible emotional dependence, social isolation, risks to privacy,…

    sally
    June 4, 2026

  • The AI Climate Hoax: Behind the Curtain of How Big Tech Greenwashes Impacts

    ‘The tech companies driving AI expansion claim that AI will eventually help solve climate change. Our analysis indicates that such claims are not based on credible and verifiable data. On the contrary, the evidence for any significant positive climate impacts from AI is weak, while its substantial climate damage is clearly documented.’ Link: https://algorithmwatch.org/en/ai-climate-hoax/

    sally
    June 4, 2026

  • Algorithmic judging: lessons of logic and jurisprudence – International Review of Law, Computers and Technology

    ‘This article considers the nature and use of judging algorithms. Based on the nature of formal systems, legal indeterminacy and the nature of law as a socially normative force, we are sceptical about judging algorithms. We first consider the nature of algorithms and formal systems, noting that formal systems of more than trivial complexity are necessarily incomplete.…

    sally
    June 4, 2026

  • Artificial Intelligence and Equality at Work: Evaluating the Adequacy of The UK Legal Framework For Responding to The Discrimination Risks of New Technologies – Industrial Law Journal

    ‘Artificial intelligence (AI) and automated tools are likely to replicate and escalate discrimination and bias in society, including in the workplace. This article examines how the UK legal framework is responding to the workplace discrimination risks posed by new technologies, with a particular focus on large language models (LLMs) like ChatGPT. Drawing on studies of…

    sally
    June 4, 2026

  • Explainable throughout the AI lifecycle: the evolution of the explainability provisions in the EU AI Act – International Review of Law, Computers and Technology

    ‘Explainability of AI systems is branded as a solution to the black box problem. The EU AI Act introduces AI explainability as a requirement for high-risk AI systems, including a right to explanation. However, understanding the wording of the requirements and the related provider and deployer obligations is complicated. This paper takes a legal-evolution research…

    sally
    June 4, 2026

  • AI Outperforms Law Professors in Stanford Law Study – Stanford Law School

    ‘In a rigorous blind study, law professors overwhelmingly preferred AI-generated answers to student legal questions over answers written by fellow law professors—and flagged the AI answers as potentially misleading or harmful far less often.’ Link: https://law.stanford.edu/press/ai-outperforms-law-professors-in-stanford-law-study/

    sally
    June 4, 2026

  • Developing GOV.UK Chat: Our data science and AI engineering journey – GOV.UK

    ‘Our tests of GOV.UK Chat, the experimental AI-powered chatbot we’re developing at the Government Digital Service (GDS), have given us clear evidence that it saves people time and provides them with helpful information. This has given us the confidence to begin opening up access more widely – and to get to this point, we’ve been on a…

    sally
    June 4, 2026

  • Lawyers, meet your AI ‘twin’ – Reuters

    ‘Working with an AI-focused research lab at Stanford Law School, Vorys has developed “AI personas” of ​19 of its partners, which can be embedded within generative AI tools to offer responses to questions and edit documents in the style of individual partners.’ Link: https://www.reuters.com/legal/litigation/lawyers-meet-your-ai-twin-2026-05-29/

    sally
    June 4, 2026

  • AI and the machinization of humans: an escape from the burdens of existence – AI and Ethics

    ‘Rather than creating human-like intelligence in AI, the AI field is re-defining the human in mechanistic terms, causing us to overlook a crucial inverse question: in what ways are humans and societies becoming more machine-like? In this paper we discuss three examples of how humans are becoming more machine-like: (1) the replacement of human thought…

    sally
    June 4, 2026

  • AI Initiative Speaker Series: Legal Risks with GenAI with Professor Mark Lemley – Stanford Law School

    ‘Professor Mark Lemley examined the implications of generative AI for copyright law, with a focus on authorship, fair use, and creative ownership. The conversation explored how legal doctrine must evolve in response to machine-generated content and what the rise of AI means for the future of creative work.’ Link: https://youtu.be/qRaq-3BZfNg?si=IPhDu-O-9pN-AJLq

    sally
    June 4, 2026

  • AI in courts demands disciplined legal workflows – Hogan Lovells

    ‘Courts are confronting AI hallucinations, but real challenge is building safe, effective legal workflows and supervision.’ Link: https://www.hoganlovells.com/en/publications/ai-in-courts-demands-disciplined-legal-workflows

    sally
    June 4, 2026

  • No AI – Duck Duck Go

    ‘Discover our AI-free search experience that automatically turns off all AI features and filters out AI-generated images—no settings required.’ Link: https://noai.duckduckgo.com/

    sally
    June 4, 2026

  • Publisher Conduct Requirement: Google’s general search services – Competition and Markets Authority

    Link: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/6a1f0098b95db968c8f3bdb9/Publisher_CR_final_decision.pdf

    sally
    June 4, 2026

  • Writing effective prompts

    A downloadble example to help explain effective prompt writing. Link: https://ai-update.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/are-the-teenage-mutant-ninja-turtles-still-alive.pdf

    sally
    June 3, 2026

  • US students on why they booed their pro-AI graduation speakers: ‘They’re not reading the room’ – The Guardian

    ‘Recent college grads are not very fond of commencement speakers hyping up a technology they see as a threat to their career prospects.’ Link: https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2026/may/26/students-boo-pro-ai-graduation-speakers

    sally
    June 2, 2026

  • Deepfakes to Deletion Orders: Tackling technology enabled sexual offending in the Crime and Policing Act 2026 – Kingsley Napley Criminal Law Blog

    ‘On 29 April 2026, the Crime and Policing Bill received Royal Assent and will take effect as the Crime and Policing Act 2026 (the “CPA”) on 29 June 2026.’ Link: https://www.kingsleynapley.co.uk/insights/blogs/criminal-law-blog/deepfakes-to-deletion-orders-tackling-technology-enabled-sexual-offending-in-the-crime-and-policing-act-2026

    sally
    June 2, 2026

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