Rental Partner: Concerts in America presents
Laura Lootens
Diabolico
Town Hall Seattle presents
Better Tech: Putting People First in Cyberspace
EVENT NOTES
Doors for this event will open at 6:30 PM. Town Hall events are approximately 75 minutes long.

Technology powers our world. But we often give it the upper hand, treating tech solutions as right by default and accepting online risk as the price we have to pay. Rampant security breaches, unwanted surveillance, predators, and misinformation are just a normal part of cyberspace. But what if tech was designed and managed to empower and protect the people who use it? In Better Tech: Putting People First in Cyberspace, leader in tech policy Francine Berman explores this question and argues that for society to advance and humanity to thrive, technology must put people first.
Berman focuses on the riskiest and most essential technologies — social media, AI chatbots, search engines — all of which serve as digital critical infrastructure. She argues that the risk-mitigation strategies for critical infrastructure like roads, bridges, food systems, and the electrical grid can also be used for cyberspace because we should be able to expect that our technology is similarly safe, dependable, and trustworthy. Better Tech goes beyond identifying the problems of technology and provides an actionable playbook of responsible design, development, use, and regulatory strategies that can be used by everyone from policymakers to students and general readers to reduce technology’s risks and advance the public good.
Dr. Francine Berman is a data scientist, Director of Public Interest Technology, and the Stuart Rice Honorary Research Professor in the College of Information and Computer Sciences at UMass Amherst. Her work focuses on advancing the emerging field of Public Interest Technology by building its community, content, and long-term trajectory. Berman is a Faculty Associate at Harvard University’s Berkman Klein Center for Internet and Society, where she co-leads the Public Interest Technology Working Group. She also serves as a trustee of the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. Berman has provided an interdisciplinary perspective to a wide range of national organizations and advisory bodies, including a nomination by President Obama to serve on the National Council on the Humanities. Her honors include the NCWIT Pioneer in Tech Award, the ARL/CNI/Educause Paul Evan Peters Award, and the ACM/IEEE-CS Ken Kennedy Award. She has also been recognized by the Library of Congress as a “Digital Preservation Pioneer” and by HPCwire as one of “35 HPC Legends”.
Sabina Nawaz is an executive coach who advises C-level executives and teams at Fortune 500 corporations, government agencies, nonprofits, and academic institutions around the world. Sabina gives dozens of keynotes, seminars, and conferences each year and teaches faculty at Northeastern and Drexel University. During her fourteen-year tenure at Microsoft, she went from managing software development teams to leading the company’s executive development and succession planning efforts for over 11,000 managers and nearly a thousand executives. She has written for and been featured in Harvard Business Review, The Wall Street Journal, Forbes, Inc., Fast Company, NBC, Nasdaq, and MarketWatch. Sabina is the author of the book You’re the Boss, Become the Manager You Want to Be (and Others Need) by Simon & Schuster.
Presented by Town Hall Seattle.
Events are offered for informational, entertainment, and educational purposes only. Read Town Hall’s Program Content Policy.
Rental Partner: Concerts in America presents
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