Using or abusing AI?
https://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2025/11/ai-summarization-optimization.html
AI Summarization Optimization
These days, the most important meeting attendee isn’t a person: It’s the AI notetaker.
This system assigns action items and determines the importance of what is said. If it becomes necessary to revisit the facts of the meeting, its summary is treated as impartial evidence.
But clever meeting attendees can manipulate this system’s record by speaking more to what the underlying AI weights for summarization and importance than to their colleagues. As a result, you can expect some meeting attendees to use language more likely to be captured in summaries, timing their interventions strategically, repeating key points, and employing formulaic phrasing that AI models are more likely to pick up on. Welcome to the world of AI summarization optimization (AISO).
Perspective.
LexisNexis CEO says the AI law era is already here
Might be useful…
https://2025-aisola.isola-conference.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/Its_Not_the_AI-Its_Us.pdf
It’s Not the AI – It’s Us!
Artificial intelligence (AI) is no longer a futuristic idea - it is a daily companion embedded in and impacting our daily lives from education, work, to culture. Yet while AI appears to make life easier, its rise also initiates fundamental questions about who we are as humans. We believe that AI does not think, feel, or desire, but rather learns from our behavior, mirroring our collective values, biases, and aspirations. Thus, the issue is not what AI is becoming, but what we are becoming through AI. As the European Union’s Apply AI Strategy (2025) and the Vienna Manifesto on Digital Humanism (2019) emphasize, technology must serve human dignity, social well-being, and democratic accountability. We argue that the responsible use of AI begins not with code or law, but with conscient use - across individuals, families, and organizations. Here we propose the Ten Commandments for the Wise and Responsible Use of AI. This framework aligns closely with Floridi and Cowls (2019), who propose five guiding principles for AI in society - beneficence, non‑maleficence, autonomy, justice, and explicability - which underpin the ten commandments.
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