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I Worked Despite High Fever For A1 Express: Lavanya

The Judge Group Senior VP considers books a treasure trove of valuable lessons

The Judge Group Senior VP considers books a treasure trove of valuable lessons SECTIONS Share Agencies Reading is not just a hobby for Agarwal. It is a habit he is proud of. The lockdown gave us all an opportunity to learn as we received a chance to better ourselves through reading and introspection. Similarly, Abhishek Agarwal, Senior Vice President, The Judge Group focused on reading as much as he could. He believes that books are the most important sources of knowledge. I read numerous books during the lockdown but to name a few, Great Leaders have no rules, Switch, and Mad Genius come to mind. These pieces not only taught me important lessons but also helped me imbibe pertinent leadership qualities, he says.

Grampian Housing Association to freeze rent for tenants

Grampian Housing Association to freeze rent for tenants © PRESS AND JOURNAL A north-east housing group has agreed to a rent freeze for its tenants. Grampian Housing Association‘s board has decided not to increase payments for those living in one of its properties from April 1. The body hopes the announcement will bring some much-needed relief to the many tenants who have suffered financially because of Covid-19. It will also apply to service charges and owners’ management fees. Tenants and customers will receive written confirmation of this in the coming weeks. Dr Abhishek Agarwal, chairman of Grampian Housing Association, said: “As required of the Association and in keeping with our commitment to engagement, last November we consulted tenants on the rent increase and at that time the majority opted for a 0.7% increase for 2021/22.

#NAMA: Does Artificial Intelligence threaten privacy? Do the government's data protection laws have adequate safeguards?

Key takeaways: Government has carte blanche: Both Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019 and the expert committee report on Non Personal Data give the government wide-ranging powers to collect and analyse data, without adequate safeguards GDPR not ‘revolutionary’: GDPR only evolved existing privacy and data protection laws, it did not radically alter how companies collect and use data Inferred data needs to be dealt specifically: There is a need to strenghten specific provisions to safeguard individual libery and community rights when it comes to inferred data Privacy within context of hierarchies: Need to think of privacy within contexts and in terms of hierarchies, when swathes of data are analysed by artificial intelligence and automated tools

#NAMA: Is it possible to regulate Artificial Intelligence?

Key Takeaways Regulate AI applications rather than the tech: Speakers largely agreed that rather than regulating artificial intelligence in general, the use cases of the technology should be regulated. Data needs to be regulated too: In cases where data collected for AI applications could have problematic implications for the data subjects or their communities, then such data collection needs to be governed under specific regulations. Self regulation may not be enough: Self-regulation within the AI industry may not be enough since it may not solve for the massive differential between the people developing the technology and the people affected by it. However, for low-risk applications, self-regulation could be explored.

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