Cultural Policy, Artificial Intelligence, Public Interest and Global Regulation: A New Order in Socio-Technic Globalization
Cultural Policy, Artificial Intelligence, Public Interest and Global Regulation: A New Order in Socio-Technic Globalization
Wednesday, 9 July 2025: 13:30
Location: FSE025 (Faculty of Education Sciences (FSE))
Oral Presentation
In a few years’ time, artificial intelligence (AI) has challenged irrevocably the decision-making process in cultural systems, socio-technic mechanisms and governance at global level. Artificial intelligence and robots exert strong pressure on traditional socio-technic systems, cultural policy and humans decision-making process. In order to cope with the artificial intelligence is important to protect public interest and cultural rights, all countries should collaborate to develop regulatory mechanisms to control automatic decision-making algorithms in democracy. For this purpose, the use of artificial intelligence system and algorithms, together with the protection of public interest, human decision-making and cultural rights may prove extremely valuable. At the end of 2022 the form of generative AI is a reality. Generative AI refers to programs that can, as the name suggests, generate text, images, music, and more. Nowadays all countries around the world faces the necessity of achieving democratic changes by developing new legislation regarding artificial intelligence and automated decision-making process. This paper will be based on public interest theories, regulation mechanisms and of socio-technic AI as well as socio-technic applications of AI technologies. An overview of cultural policies, regulation theories and actions on AI will also be presented. Particular attention will be paid to national and EU AI regulations mechanisms. Cultural strategies provide an excellent starting point for insights on the interplay between AI and cultural systems, and offer details on specific objectives and planned activities to move the needle on AI culture development and implementation. Finally, it analyzes the model business intelligence culture (BIC) and collective will democracy (CWD) as methodological tools to introduce a cultural policy mechanism and a regulation system to protect human rights, cultural products and public interest at global and local levels.