November 6, 2025 - 10:00am to 11:00am PST
November 6, 2025 - 10:00am to 11:00am PST
Online

Generative AI is like a Rorschach test for anxieties about technology–be they privacy, replacement of workers, bias and discrimination, surveillance, or intellectual property. Our panelists discuss how to address complex questions and risks in AI while protecting civil liberties and human rights online.

Join EFF Director of Policy and Advocacy Katharine Trendacosta, EFF Staff Attorney Tori Noble, and Berkeley Center for Law & Technology Co-Director Pam Samuelson for a live discussion with Q&A. 

EFFecting Change Livestream Series:
This Title Was Written by a Human
Thursday, November 6th
10:00 AM - 11:00 AM Pacific
This event is LIVE and FREE!


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Accessibility

This event will be live-captioned and recorded. EFF is committed to improving accessibility for our events. If you have any accessibility questions regarding the event, please contact events@eff.org.

Event Expectations

EFF is dedicated to a harassment-free experience for everyone, and all participants are encouraged to view our full Event Expectations.

Upcoming Events

Want to make sure you don’t miss our next livestream? Here’s a link to sign up for updates about this series: eff.org/ECUpdates. If you have a friend or colleague that might be interested, please join the fight for your digital rights by forwarding this link: eff.org/EFFectingChange. Thank you for helping EFF spread the word about privacy and free expression online. 

Recording

We hope you and your friends can join us live! If you can't make it, we’ll post the recording afterward on YouTube and the Internet Archive!

About the Speakers

Katharine Trendacosta
Katharine is the Director of Policy and Advocacy at EFF, where she coordinates EFF's federal activism. Her areas of expertise are competition, broadband access, intellectual property, net neutrality, fair use, free speech online, and intermediary liability. Before joining EFF, Katharine spent many years as a writer and editor at the science fiction and science website io9. She has had her work appear in many other publications, including Vice, Defector, Gizmodo, and Jezebel. Katharine got a BA in history at Columbia University and a JD at USC Gould School of Law, doing work with the USC Intellectual Property and Technology Law Clinic. It was Katharine’s experience in media that led to her going to law school with an eye to learning more about fair use and copyright law.

Tori Noble
Tori is a Staff Attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation. She works on a wide array of intellectual property and civil liberties issues arising from the use of emerging technologies. Tori came to EFF from Dentons US LLP, where she maintained an active litigation and counseling practice centered on First Amendment, privacy, and intellectual property issues. Prior to joining Dentons, Tori worked as a First Amendment fellow at First Look Institute, where she represented The Intercept and its reporters in public records cases and counseled journalists, editors, and filmmakers on a wide range of newsgathering, libel, privacy, and intellectual property issues. During law school, Tori interned at EFF and served as a Google Policy Fellow at the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press. Tori holds a J.D. from Stanford Law School and a B.A. from the University of Michigan Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy.

Pam Samuelson
Pamela Samuelson is the Richard M. Sherman ’74 Distinguished Professor of Law at the University of California at Berkeley and a Co-Director of the Berkeley Center for Law & Technology. She has written and spoken extensively about the challenges that new information technologies pose for traditional legal regimes, especially for intellectual property law. She is co-founder and president of Authors Alliance. She is a member of the American Academy of Arts & Sciences, a Fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM), a Contributing Editor of Communications of the ACM, a past Fellow of the John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, and an Honorary Professor of the University of Amsterdam. She is also Chair of the Board of Directors of the Electronic Frontier Foundation. She joined the Berkeley faculty in 1996 after serving as a professor at the University of Pittsburgh Law School. She has also visited at Columbia, Cornell, Fordham, Harvard, and NYU Law Schools.