Articles:
1) Shany, Y. (2023). Digital Rights and the Outer Limits of International Human Rights Law. German Law Journal, 24(3), 461-472.doi:10.1017/glj.2023.35
2) Shany, Y (2024). To Use AI or not Use AI? Autonomous Weapon Systems and their complicated relationship with the right to life. Ljubljana Law Review, Volume 84 (forthcoming in 2024) https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4729741
3) Shadmy, T, Ligett, K. (2024). Reimagining Decentralized AI. CSLAW ’24, March 12–13, 2024, Boston, MA, USA. https://dl.acm.org/doi/pdf/10.1145/3614407.3643701
Forthcoming:
1) Tal Mimran & Lior Weinstein, A Critical Assessment of the Facebook Oversight Board: Artistic Speech Moderation as A Case Study (Forthcoming, in Routledge Handbook of Social Media, Law and Society, 2024).
2) Tal Mimran & Lior Weinstein, A Domestic Perspective on the Regulation of Cyberspace: The Israeli Offensive Cyber Industry as a Case Study (Forthcoming, NATO CCDCOE, 2024).
Blog posts:
1) Yohannes Eneyew Ayalew and Yuval Shany, ‘The 2024 AU Common Position on the Application of International Law in the Cyberspace: Some Implications for the Development of Digital Human Rights’ EJIL:Talk! Blog of the European Journal of International Law (November 15, 2024).
Yohannes Eneyew Ayalew and Yuval Shany analyse the African Union's (AU) adoption of the Common African Position (CAP) on international law in cyberspace. The authors focus on the CAP’s approach to digital human rights, including how existing human rights apply online, the potential development of new digital rights, and the obligations of both states and private companies in protecting these rights. The authors note that the CAP missed the opportunity to lead in defining new .digital rights, clarifying extraterritorial obligations, and emphasising African communal values in cyberspace governance. Read the full post here.
2) Yuval Shany, ‘A Right to a Human-to-Human Interaction’ Institute for AI Ethics, University of Oxford blog, (November 7, 2024).
Yuval Shany examines the emerging rights not to be subjected to automated decisions and to be notified when interacting with AI system, which already appear in certain AI regulatory frameworks, may be stepping stones on a future path towards developing a new and broader right to human-to-human interaction. The author notes that the right to a human-to-human interaction implicates other human rights such as the right to dignity. Read the full post here.
3) Noa Mor, Meta’s Oversight Board’s Report on AI: What’s Left Unpacked (2024),
4) Dafna Dror, The Council of Europe Convention on Artificial Intelligence: The Future Is Here? (2024)
5) Dafna Dror & Amir Cahane, ECJ ruling on SCHUFA scoring system: Rebooting the right to a human decision-maker in the AI Age? (2024)
6) Dafna Dror, Corporate Responsibility for Human Rights in a Changing Reality: Following Twitter, Inc. v. Taamneh et al. (2023) (In Hebrew)
7) Dafna Dror & Amir Cahane, Human Rights in Artificial Intelligence: The U.S. Blueprint for an AI Bill of Rights and Its Implications (2023) (In Hebrew)
Presentations:
Dr. Tamar Megiddo: Are Human Rights up to the Challenge of Spyware?, Presented at: 4.5.2023, 10thPrivacy Convention, Tel Aviv University.