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Venerdì 29 giugno
2018, ore 14.30 - 16.30
Sala
lettura Biblioteca Centrale di Ingegneria
Politecnico di Torino, Corso Duca degli Abruzzi,
24, Torino
https://nexa.polito.it/2018/02/bfrischmann
Re-Engineering
Humanity
Speaker:
Prof. Brett
Frischmann (Villanova University)
Discussant:
Philippe Agrain
(Sopinspace)
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In this
wide-reaching, interdisciplinary book, Brett
Frischmann and Evan Selinger examine what’s
happening to our lives as society embraces big
data, predictive analytics, and smart
environments. They explain how the goal of
designing programmable worlds goes hand in
hand with engineering predictable and
programmable people. Detailing new frameworks,
provocative case studies, and mind-blowing
thought experiments, Frischmann and Selinger
reveal hidden connections between fitness
trackers, electronic contracts, social media
platforms, robotic companions, fake news,
autonomous cars, and more. This powerful
analysis should be read by anyone interested
in understanding exactly how technology
threatens the future of our society, and what
we can do now to build something better.
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Venerdì 29 giugno
2018, ore 16.30 - 17.45
Sala
lettura Biblioteca Centrale di Ingegneria
Politecnico di Torino, Corso Duca degli Abruzzi,
24, Torino
https://nexa.polito.it/2018/04/jcguedon
Recasting the
learned periodical in open access: from
kingmaker to community content as king
Speaker:
Prof. Jean-Claude
Guédon (Université de Montréal)
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Silently, learned
periodicals have seen their nature shift
between 1950 and 1990: society and academic
publishers have been displaced by
international, commercial, publishers.
Digitization has allowed revisiting the
processes accompanying learned communication,
and has given rise to the Open Access
Movement. After first resisting this trend,
commercial publishers (and others) have come
to embrace open access, but, so doing, have
also tried to reshape it to their advantage
(e.g. the hybrid journals). Meanwhile, funding
agencies, both private and public, are
beginning to see that their role too can
shift. Deconstructing the "publishing
function" is opening up new, improved, vistas
for learned communication, while offering the
promise of a better economic context for
research institutions, libraries, and most
learned societies.
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Venerdì 29 giugno
2018, ore 15.00 - 17.00
Dipartimento
di Giurisprudenza, Campus Luigi Einaudi, aula
H2, secondo piano, D4, Lungo Dora Siena, 100 A,
Torino.
https://nexa.polito.it/2018/03/lguibault
Copyright Law’s
Impact on Scientific Research
Speaker:
Prof. Lucie
Guibault (Dalhousie University)
Discussant:
Massimo Durante
(Università degli Studi di Torino)
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This lecture
examines how the European rules on copyright
affect scientific research, in particular
through text and data mining (TDM). TDM is an
increasingly popular research method that uses
computational capacity to query mass
quantities of information in order to produce
new knowledge. TDM involves the reproduction
of the information to be queried. The question
arises whether this practice amounts to an
infringement of copyright. The lecture will
analyse the rules in force in selected Member
States and will take a critical look at the
relevant provisions of the Proposal for a
European Directive on Copyright in the Digital
Single Market.”
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See our events
calendar if you're curious about future
luncheons, discussions, lectures, and
conferences not listed in this email. Our
events are free and open to the public, unless
otherwise noted.
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