Governance of Generative AI
(October 1, 2024)
Governance of Generative AI
(October 1, 2024)
October 1, 2024
Date
9:00am - 1:00pm
Time
RM 1,200
Program Fee
In-person
Format
With all the excitement around Generative AI (GenAI), it is easy to overlook the unique risks it presents. This program is designed to help directors and senior management understand the critical aspects of managing GenAI in their organizations, including key legal risks, potential liabilities, regulatory compliance and reputational threats. Participants will also gain insights into the regulatory landscape in Malaysia and learn to develop governance frameworks that address these challenges.
The program will help directors and senior management effectively integrate AI governance into their overall corporate governance structures. It will also cover how to develop and implement AI strategies that balance innovation with responsible use.
- Explain AI and its key attributes;
- Identify and address legal risks and issues concerning AI;
- Ask relevant AI-related questions to line management and develop a governance framework for responsible AI use that aligns with the organisation’s corporate values.
- Board of Directors
- Senior Management
- Anyone who might find this program helpful
Faculty Profile
Faculty
Khoo Guan Huat is a distinguished litigator with over 30 years of experience. Commencing his legal career with the Attorney-General’s Chambers in 1987, he later joined Skrine, one of Malaysia’s leading full-service law firms, in 1993.
Designated by the Government of Malaysia as a member of the Panels of Arbitrators and Conciliators of ICSID (2021-2027), he has also been a member of the Board of Studies, Faculty of Law, University of Malaya since 2015, and has served on various committees at Bursa Malaysia, including the Compensation, Listing, and Market Participants Committees.
He is an Adjunct Senior Lecturer at the ICLIF Executive Education Centre (now part of Asia School of Business). Listed on the Asian International Arbitration Centre’s panel of arbitrators, he is also a panelist for Domain Name Dispute Resolution. He has extensive teaching experience at the University of Malaya, where he lectured in the Certificate in Legal Practice course (1990-2004) and taught the Law of International Trade in the LLM program (1990). Additionally, he is a fully registered Foreign Lawyer with the Singapore International Commercial Court.
Natalie Lim is a partner in the Intellectual Property (IP), Telecommunications, Media and Technology (TMT) and Privacy and Data Protection practice at Skrine.
As a partner in a firm that has been consistently ranked as a top-tier TMT and IP firm in Malaysia, Natalie frequently advises on complex and novel legal and regulatory matters related to telecommunications, technology, data protection, intellectual property, media, e-commerce and gaming. Her work focuses on advising domestic and international clients across various sectors, tech startups and government agencies on navigating the intersection of technology implementation and regulatory compliance.
In the TMT sector, Natalie regularly advises clients on their infrastructure and services, including those related to artificial intelligence (AI), such as fibre and terrestrial wireless connectivity, satellite and space-based communication systems, data centres, cloud services, OTT services and connected vehicles. In 2019, she was appointed to serve on the national 5G Task Force established by the telecommunications regulator, the Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission. She also provides regular training to clients on AI governance and related topics.