The symposium held a student-paper competition and received 61 submissions. The following 14 papers were selected for poster presentation at a reception on October 28, following the final panel session.
- Karni Chagal-Feferkorn, Haifa University
- When Do AI Systems That Caused Damage Warrant Unique Legal Treatment?
- Sarah Scheffler and Jacob Ostling, Boston University
- Dismantling False Assumptions about Autonomous Weapon Systems
- Rebecca Iafrati, Georgetown University
- Can the CCPA Access Right Be Saved? Realigning Incentives in Access Request Verification
- Mario Trujillo, Georgetown University
- The antitrust case for data portability
- Alexandra Horn, University of Florida
- Deepfakes, Real Harms: Using Child Pornography Legislation in Interpreting Nonconsensual Pornography Statutes to Include Deepfake Pornography
- Sarp Gurakan, Harvard University
- The Epistemological Status of Machine Learning
- Julia Wei, Yale University
- Algorithms for Judicial Subset Selection
- Peter Story, Carnegie Mellon University
- Government use of AI: Costs and Benefits of Transparency
- Lillian Chin, Harvard University
- Focusing the Legal Lens on Data: Examining Metaphors of Personal Data and their Legal Implications
- Vishal Rakhecha, NALSAR University of Law
- Effectuating Digital Exhaustion
- Ashi Agrawal, Tinuola Dada, Alexa Hui, and Ellie Lammoglia-Morel, Stanford University
- Blockchain and Machine Learning Usage for Human Rights Documentation: An Examination of Technical, Legal and Practical Considerations
- Anuhya Vajapey, Miranda McClellan, and Nur Lalji, Georgetown University and MIT
- Identifying Discimination In Online Advertising
- Jenny Fan and Amy Zhang, Harvard University and MIT
- Digital Juries: A Civics-Oriented Approach to Platform Governance
- Aniket Kesari, UC Berkeley
- Predicting Cybersecurity Incidents Through Mandatory Disclosure Regulation