Pasquale Stanzione

President
“We live in the data era. Our policies, our economies and our lives are affected by the data flow and by technologies that run faster than the rules needed to ensure their sustainable development. Therefore, it is necessary for us that the G7 Privacy focuses on the Data Free Flow with Trust, emerging technologies, the implementation of an international cooperation to establish new engagement rules at the global level, thus ensuring sustainable, inclusive, fair and just innovation for all.”
Ginevra Cerrina Feroni

Vice President
“We should not think of AI as an isolated technology with no effects on our existence. AI is a product of the human beings, mostly based on personal data, that will deeply affect our way of living. Succeeding in governing it in the right way means allowing it to express its beneficial power for all. In this regard, National DPAs that operates to safeguard the fundamental right to personal data protection is, and will be, more and more unavoidable.”
Agostino Ghiglia

Board Member
“With the advent of AI, the relation and equilibrium between science/technology and human rights/ethics/safeguards is and will be even more relevant; the protection of personal data – among other things – represents and will increasingly represent a means of defending the individual’s freedom and uniqueness, countering the risk of algorithms reflecting a single worldview, of chatbots producing and disseminating preconceptions, biases, and fake news. We must therefore monitor the inputs and data used to train AI, as well as the ways in which this new task is performed, without forgetting the invisibles of the gig economy”
Guido Scorza

Board Member
“No antagonism exists between the right to protection of personal data and the right to innovation. The challenge we are called to face is that of ensuring to people the right not to choose between fundamental rights. We must define rules to guarantee the access of people to the extraordinary opportunities offered by artificial intelligence, while preserving, at the same time, privacy and other fundamental rights. In doing so, the main algorithm provides for each right to be limited to the minimum extent necessary to guarantee another, without any right being able to stand as a tyrant over the others”.