Please join us for the first event in the Princeton LLM Forum Series: A Conversation with Meredith Whittaker (President of Signal) on the implications of LLM technology on society.

This session's Princeton respondent will be Arvind Narayanan (Professor of Computer Science and Director of the Center for Information and Technology Policy).

Wednesday, Oct 25, 4:30 – 6:00 pm
Friend Center 101
RSVPs encouraged (RSVP link)
Reception to follow
Add to Calendar | More info

Meredith Whittaker is the President of Signal. She is the current Chief Advisor, and the former Faculty Director and Co-Founder of the AI Now Institute. Her research and advocacy focus on the social implications of artificial intelligence and the tech industry responsible for it, with a particular emphasis on power and the political economy driving the commercialization of computational technology. Prior to founding AI Now, she worked at Google for over a decade, where she led product and engineering teams, founded Google’s Open Research Group, and co-founded M-Lab, a globally distributed network measurement platform that now provides the world’s largest source of open data on internet performance. She has advised the White House, the FCC, FTC, the City of New York, the European Parliament, and many other governments and civil society organizations on artificial intelligence, internet policy, measurement, privacy, and security.


The Princeton LLM Forum

Recent breakthroughs in Artificial Intelligence (AI) have produced a new class of neural networks called Large Language Models (LLMs) that demonstrate a remarkable capability to generate fluent, plausible responses to prompts posed in natural language. While LLMs have already revolutionized certain industry applications, the debut of ChatGPT has generated new anxiety and curiosity about machine intelligence, especially in the way we teach, research, tell stories, and report facts.

Co-organized with the Department of Computer Science and supported by the Humanities Council, the Princeton LLM Forum brings together leading scholars and researchers to discuss the implications that LLMs have on our understanding of language, society, culture, and theory of mind.

Read more about the forum and upcoming events in the series.