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Folk from Montana State University Library presented their work on the
IMLS-funded Responsible AI project at the Fantastic Futures conference
<https://docs.google.com/document/d/1uFJYkk3tw9a4cKqM96-j0hRXF2q0S1O6WNhr3F6zS6g/edit>
last week: https://www.lib.montana.edu/responsible-ai/

The recordings from the conference will be available soon, and I'd
encourage people to check out AI4LAM <https://sites.google.com/view/ai4lam>,
the group that organised it, as a friendly, active community of people
working on AI in libraries, museums and archives.

I've been looking into it in the UK context, where there are already a
number of guidelines for civil servants (relevant to our work at the
British Library) and others from bodies like the BBC.

Cheers,
Mia

--------------------------------------------
http://openobjects.org.uk/
<http://twitter.com/mia_out>
https://hcommons.social/@mia
The Collective Wisdom Handbook: perspectives on crowdsourcing in cultural
heritage <https://britishlibrary.pubpub.org/>
Crowdsourcing our Cultural Heritage
<https://www.miaridge.com/crowdsourcing-our-cultural-heritage/>
P.S. I mostly use this address for list mail and don't check it daily


On Mon, 20 Nov 2023 at 15:30, Ray Voelker <[log in to unmask]> wrote:

> Hi Code4Lib,
>
> Does anyone belong to an org -- or know of one -- that has written /
> established any guidelines around the use of AI in the context of library
> data and staff use?
>
> I had seen that the Urban Libraries Council released a brief on the subject
> (https://www.urbanlibraries.org/files/AI_Leadership-Brief_October2023.pdf)
> but I was wondering if anyone has "formalized" some of these concerns for
> "responsible AI use."
>
> I had started a draft, but I was curious what others were thinking /
> planning around this subject.
> https://gist.github.com/rayvoelker/5730766001b3306fdb6955451ba26115
>
> -- Ray
>