Emmanuel Salami. Photo: Ridwan Oloyede
In his doctoral dissertation, Emmanuel Salami critically examines the data protection and intellectual property intersections that affect Artificial Intelligence. Salami argues that the (non-)regulation of one of these fields of law might raise concerns in the other, thereby necessitating the consideration.
Artificial Intelligence (AI) systems are a disruptive and potentially
intrusive technology. As a result, assessing AI’s compliance with
existing data protection and intellectual property law is necessary. The
importance of the focus areas of Salami’s doctoral research is the
interconnectivity between both fields for all stakeholders involved.
The
interconnectivity between both domains stems from the fact that an
Intellectual Property (IP) law regulatory effort of AI might create
compliance gaps in data protection law.
– For instance, an
attempt to appropriate or exercise IP rights over non-personal data
might violate data protection law for various reasons, including data
reidentification, Salami explains.
The data that identifies
natural persons – e.g. vehicle identification numbers – amounts to
personal data within the scope of Article 4(1) GDPR, even when it is
being processed without any intention of identifying or re-identifying
natural persons.
– The research argues that such restrictive
classification and definition of personal data may hinder AI's
widespread, lawful and successful deployment because supposedly
anonymized and non-personal data may still be re-identifiable with the
aid of AI systems, thereby subjecting it to data protection law. The
implication is that very few categories of data will genuinely qualify
as non-personal data, potentially limiting the scope of data available
to AI systems.
The overarching question that Salami’s research
attempts to answer pertains to the feasibility of retaining the
definition of personal data as it is today and its possible effects on
AI.
– As a solution, my research proposes the redefinition of
personal data within the scope of EU law to cope with the circumstances
highlighted above.
Information on the public examination
The
academic dissertation "Artificial Intelligence: the end of Legal
Protection of Personal Data and Intellectual Property? Research on the
countering effects of data protection and IPR on the regulation of
Artificial Intelligence systems" by Emmanuel Salami will be publicly
defended with the consent of the Faculty of Law of the University of
Lapland and will be presented for public inspection on Friday 12 January
2024 from 12 noon in lecture hall C147. The opponent is Professor Burkhard Schafer (Edinburgh Law School), and the Custos is Professor Rosa Maria Ballardini (University of Lapland).
The public defence can be followed online at at https://blogi.eoppimispalvelut.fi/ulapland2/
Information on the doctoral candidate
LLM
Emmanuel Salami is a Privacy Counsel for a global tech company and a
researcher at the University of Lapland in Finland. He has authored
articles in data protection and intellectual property law as it pertains
to AI.
Further information
Emmanuel Salami, emmanuel.salami (at) ulapland.fi
Information on the publication
Emmanuel
Salami (2023) Artificial intelligence: the end of legal protection of
personal data and intellectual property? Research on the countering
effects of data protection and IPR on the regulation of artificial
intelligence systems. Acta electronica Universitatis Lapponiensis.
University of Lapland, Rovaniemi.
Permanent address of the electronic publication:
https://urn.fi/URN:ISBN:978-952-337-399-0