You Don't Own Me
- 304pages
- 11 heures de lecture
The question of whether our ideas are our own or our employer's set off the greatest toy war of our time.
Orly Lobel est professeur de droit et examine la dynamique de la créativité et de l'innovation dans la société moderne. Son travail analyse en profondeur comment les environnements et les institutions influencent le développement du talent et la pensée libre. S'appuyant sur sa formation académique et sa perspective unique, Lobel découvre des moyens de favoriser et de libérer le potentiel humain. Ses analyses offrent des perspectives précieuses à quiconque s'intéresse aux cultures et aux contextes qui encouragent la croissance et l'originalité.


The question of whether our ideas are our own or our employer's set off the greatest toy war of our time.
A professor of law and technology at the University of San Diego offers a contrarian and optimistic argument that AI, robotics, and digital platforms can be used as a tool to help achieve equality. The Equality Machine ignites a deeply informed, aggressively researched conversation about the path to digital era equality. From closing the gender pay gap to exposing and correcting biases in hiring and marketing, tracking and preventing workplace harassment and diversifying the cultural images and voices we see and hear online, to increasing the privacy and safety of women and girls, artificial intelligence, big data, and digital platforms can offer a positive path towards a better future. This book presents a vision, a blueprint, and a call to action: despite its risks and flaws, digitization can and must become a powerful force for good -- for fairness, inclusion, and equality. Through wise implementation of new technology, we can implement a more equal market. This book offers new insights, research-based solutions, and updated policies for a more inclusive and fair society.