Mireille Gomes – Can Algorithms Heal? Reimagining Health Equity with AI and Data Justice

Mireille Gomes discusses the importance of designing health technologies that prioritize dignity and equity over efficiency. Examining barriers like uneven infrastructure and data voids, she advocates for consent-first design, representation in data, and community involvement to ensure fair algorithms. The conversation urges attention to ethical standards in AI healthcare. Continue reading Mireille Gomes – Can Algorithms Heal? Reimagining Health Equity with AI and Data Justice

Season 5, Episode 29. The Look of the Law: Courts Confront Digital Design Rights

This content explores the evolving landscape of design law, focusing on how it adapts to digital environments, including GUIs and metaverse items. It discusses legal precedents across various countries and highlights the importance of intellectual property strategies for creators. The piece emphasizes the merging of physical and digital design rights. Continue reading Season 5, Episode 29. The Look of the Law: Courts Confront Digital Design Rights

Season 5, Bonus. AI vs. Human: The Invention Showdown

What happens when artificial intelligence challenges humans for the invention crown? We dive into this provocative question by examining real-world examples where AI has revolutionized fields from drug discovery to furniture design.

The evidence is compelling. AI systems have accelerated medical research, discovered antibiotics against resistant bacteria, identified new molecular patterns, and generated creative designs faster than humans could imagine. Yet every breakthrough required human direction, interpretation, and implementation. As we explore this partnership, the podcast reveals a fundamental truth – innovation isn’t humans versus machines but humans with machines.

The legal landscape adds another dimension to this discussion. We unpack the fascinating “Davos Saga,” where Dr. Stephen Thaler’s attempt to list his AI system as an inventor on patent applications met resistance worldwide. Courts in the United States, United Kingdom, Europe, Australia, Japan, and Switzerland all reached the same conclusion: under current law, only natural persons can be inventors. This global consensus reflects the view that AI remains a sophisticated tool rather than an autonomous creator deserving legal rights.

For inventors navigating this evolving landscape, emotional barriers often prove as challenging as technical ones. That’s why we introduce the powerful “Fear Setting” exercise from my book “Protection of the Inventive Mind.” This practical technique helps transform anxiety into action by confronting worst-case scenarios, developing safeguards, and planning recovery strategies. Download the worksheet from our website to experience how quickly your innovation fears diminish when systematically addressed.
Whether you’re a human inventor seeking to harness AI’s capabilities or simply fascinated by the intersection of technology and creativity, this episode offers valuable insights into the future of innovation. 

Subscribe now and join us in exploring how the most powerful inventions emerge when human intuition meets algorithmic intelligence. Continue reading Season 5, Bonus. AI vs. Human: The Invention Showdown

Season 3, Episode 8. Shield your trademark – Peter Hlavnicka and Anthony Keats

Those closest to you are the ones capable of causing more significant harm. So for our last episode of the season, we talked with Peter Hlavnicka and Anthony Keats about trademark protection and their books: “Protecting the Brand: Counterfeiting and Grey Markets” and “Protecting the Brand: Busting the Bootlegs.” Continue reading Season 3, Episode 8. Shield your trademark – Peter Hlavnicka and Anthony Keats

Season 3, Episode 6. Coverage for accidental IP infringement – Patrick R. Goold

An action can cause an unwanted or unforeseen consequence. If we did not intent intellectual property infringement, shouldn’t we find a way to protect ourselves against such missteps? Patrick R. Goold recounts his book “IP Accidents: Negligence Liability in Intellectual Property”. Continue reading Season 3, Episode 6. Coverage for accidental IP infringement – Patrick R. Goold

Season 3, Episode 5. Against progress – Jessica Silbey

Give me your creations, inventions and innovations, and I will give you back exclusive rights for the greater good of humanity is the general promise of the intellectual property system. Our guest Jessica Silbey details if IP is keeping its promise while explaining how to guide the conversation toward the needed change. Continue reading Season 3, Episode 5. Against progress – Jessica Silbey

Season 3, Episode 2. In the name of science? Copyright vs. Open Access – Professor John Willinsky

Can Open Access be the answer to hinder widespread misinformation? What role does Copyright play? Professor John Willinsky talks about the changes needed in the US Copyright Law and his book “Copyright’s Broken Promise: How to Restore the Laws Ability to Promote the Progress of Science”. Continue reading Season 3, Episode 2. In the name of science? Copyright vs. Open Access – Professor John Willinsky