Aurelia Tamò-Larrieux is a postdoctoral researcher at the Center for Information Technology, Society, and Law (ITSL) and at the Digital Society Initiative (DSI) at the University of Zurich. Her research interests include privacy, especially privacy-by-design, data protection, social robots, automated decision-making, and trust in automation. Aurelia has published her PhD research on the topic of data protection by design and default for the Internet of Things in the book Designing for Privacy and its Legal Framework (Springer, 2018). Currently, she is working on her postdoctoral thesis with the working title "Trusting Machines: Towards Trust-Enhancing Regulation of Algorithmic Systems".
Christoph Lutz is an associate professor at the Nordic Centre for Internet and Society (NCIS), BI Norwegian Business School (Oslo). His research interests revolve around the social implications of new technologies. More specifically, Christoph investigates digital inequalities, privacy, online participation, the sharing economy, social robots, and new forms of work, using a variety of methods and theories. In these areas, Christoph has published widely in top-tier journals such as New Media & Society, Journal of Management Information Systems, Information, Communication & Society, Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology, and Social Media + Society. Recent publications include Crowdwork and the Mobile Underclass, The Robot Privacy Paradox, The Chilling Effects of Algorithmic Profiling and The Privacy Implications of Social Robots.
Eduard Fosch-Villaronga is Assistant Professor at the eLaw Center for Law and Digital Technologies at Leiden University (NL). Eduard is currently serving the European Commission in the Sub-Group on Artificial Intelligence (AI), connected products and other new challenges in product safety to the Consumer Safety Network (CSN) to revise the General Product Safety directive. He is also the co-leader of the Working Group on the Ethical, Legal and Societal Aspects for Wearable Robots at the H2020 COST Action CA16116. His publications are available online on ResearchGate, which includes his latest research on sex care robots or on the importance of including the LGBTQ+ community in the development of AI to avoid discrimination, featured by Nature Machine Intelligence. He also published a book entitled ‘Robots, Healthcare, and the Law. Regulating Automation in Personal Care’ with Routledge.