International conference details
Healthcare
Legal Issues Raised by Deploying AI in Healthcare
Fremont (United States), 20 April 2020
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Key deadlines
- Conference starts:
- 2020-04-20
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Conference Description
Overview:
Classically, the law reasons by analogy, and from precedent. The theory is that the law should deal with like situations in like ways.
Classically, the law reasons by analogy, and from precedent. The theory is that the law should deal with like situations in like ways. In some respects, however, Artificial Intelligence, especially the concept of machine learning, is virtually unprecedented, so the law is struggling with how to deal with it, or will be soon. Consider a few of the difficulties that the law will probably need to address:
Who will pay for healthcare services dependent on AI, and who will be entitled to such payments? Will those payments be keyed to "value," the currently orthodox yardstick? If so, by what means will “value” be measured, especially if, as many predict, outcomes may change unforeseeably?
Who will own the massive trove of data AI learns from and bases decisions on, and how will the rights of the owner be protected?
What governmental agencies will have a voice in regulating the use of AI in health care, and how will they rule? How will federalism issues be addressed?
Who will own the AI system’s intellectual property, and how will that owner’s rights be protected? Can a machine that has learned, as it was programmed to do, and then acted upon its learning, be seen as a creator, or as an inventor? If so, can it hold intellectual property rights in its own creations, and if so, how will those be protected, and for whose benefit? If not, who does hold such rights?
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Conference creator: MentorHealth
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Conference Location
Online Event,
Fremont 94539 (United States)