From 29 to 31 May, the Faculty of Law hosted the Tenth International Conference of the Surveillance Studies Network, hosted locally by the Institute of Criminology at the Faculty of Law in Ljubljana. More than 250 speakers from all over the world presented papers on social surveillance. Among the many speakers who participated in several dozen panels, our researchers also took part in the Making Information Matter, Surveillance War, Regulating Surveillance and Regulating AI panels:

Aleš Završnik with his presentation “Access denied: the barriers to data for research in the public interest”;

Vasja Badalič with her presentation “Blurring the line between combatants and civilians: Permanent Surveillance and Metadata Analysis in the Target Selection Process”;

Iva Ramuš Cvetkovič with a presentation on “Surveillance and Space Technology: Possible ways towards more effective legal regulation”; and

Pika Šarf with her presentation on “Unveiling the enforcement tools for rogue AI: is there room for algorithmic disgorgement under the GDPR?”.

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