From surveillance capitalism to racial bias in AI and deepfake media, SCL Student Bytes are here to give you the latest discussions surrounding the dawn of the fourth industrial revolution.
Publishes | Weekly | Episodes | 12 | Founded | 4 years ago |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Categories | NewsTech NewsTechnology |
MSTL speaks to Susan Benesch, director and founder of the Dangerous Speech Project, and Faculty Associate of Harvard's Berkman Klein Center, about the Facebook Oversight Board's decision to uphold the ban on Donald Trump's Facebook account, and the r... more
'What is being traded is not the artwork, it's the participation.'
CFO and Co-Founder of Capexmove, Eti Cüneyt, discusses what NFTs are, why the NBA is using them, and how the world may respond to the continuing expansion of the cryptosphere.
What duties does the internet owe you? A discussion with Lorna Woods, Professor of Internet Law at the University of Essex, on establishing a statutory duty of care owed by internet platforms to users of their services.
How are HighQ and Bryter are being used to assist Refugees in Greece?
Phil Worthington, Managing Director of European Lawyers in Lesvos (ELIL), explains how these platforms are being used to increase access to justice for the thousands of refugees a... more
AI's potential vs legal uncertainty. Who wins?
Head of AI at Gowling WLG and co-editor of ‘The Law of Artificial Intelligence’ gives us an insight.
Full conversation out now.
Understanding and assisting the use of digital evidence to increase accountability for atrocity crimes and human rights abuses.
This goal and more is shared by Bethany Houghton, assistant counsel at Public International Law and Policy Group.
There is increasing concern that machine learning tools embed bias in their operations and outputs. To what extent does the law currently provide adequate protection from or adequate redress in respect of any such discrimination?
This clip is taken from a full conversation with Bethany Houghton, assistant counsel at The Public International Law and Policy Group. Coming soon.
Find out how many people listen to Making Sense of Tech Law and see how many downloads it gets.
We scanned the web and collated all of the information that we could find in our comprehensive podcast database.
Listen to the audio and view podcast download numbers, contact information, listener demographics and more to help you make better decisions about which podcasts to sponsor or be a guest on.
Listeners, engagement and demographics and more for this podcast.
Gender Skew | Engagement Score | Primary Location | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Social Media Reach |
Rephonic provides a wide range of data for three million podcasts so you can understand how popular each one is. See how many people listen to Making Sense of Tech Law and access YouTube viewership numbers, download stats, chart rankings, ratings and more.
Simply upgrade your account and use these figures to decide if the show is worth pitching as a guest or sponsor.
There are two ways to find viewership numbers for podcasts on YouTube. First, you can search for the show on the channel and if it has an account, scroll through the videos to see how many views it gets per episode.
Rephonic also pulls the total number of views for each podcast we find a YouTube account for. You can access these figures by upgrading your account and looking at a show's social media section.
Podcast streaming numbers or 'plays' are notoriously tricky to find. Fortunately, Rephonic provides estimated listener figures for Making Sense of Tech Law and three million other podcasts in our database.
To check these stats and get a feel for the show's audience size, you'll need to upgrade your account.
To see how many followers or subscribers Making Sense of Tech Law has, simply upgrade your account. You'll find a whole host of extra information to help you decide whether appearing as a sponsor or guest on this podcast is right for you or your business.
If it's not, use the search tool to find other podcasts with subscriber numbers that match what you're looking for.
Rephonic provides a full set of podcast information for three million podcasts, including the number of listeners. You can see some of this data for free. But you will need to upgrade your account to access premium data.
Making Sense of Tech Law launched 4 years ago and published 12 episodes to date. You can find more information about this podcast including rankings, audience demographics and engagement in our podcast database.
Our systems regularly scour the web to find email addresses and social media links for this podcast. But in the unlikely event that you can't find what you're looking for, our concierge service lets you request our research team to source better contact information for you.
Our systems scan a variety of public sources including the podcast's official website, RSS feed, and email databases to provide you with a trustworthy source of podcast contact information. We also have our own research team on-hand to manually find email addresses if you can't find exactly what you're looking for.
Rephonic pulls reviews for Making Sense of Tech Law from multiple sources, including Apple Podcasts, Castbox, Podcast Addict and more.
View all the reviews in one place instead of visiting each platform individually and use this information to decide whether this podcast is worth pitching as a guest or sponsor.
You can view podcasts similar to Making Sense of Tech Law by exploring Rephonic's 3D interactive graph. This tool uses the data displayed on the 'Listeners Also Subscribed To' section of Apple Podcasts to visualise connections between shows.