contributor portait

Daniel Shin

Virginia
Cybersecurity Researcher and Adjunct Professor
William & Mary Law School

About

Daniel Shin is the Center for Legal and Court Technology's (CLCT) Cybersecurity Researcher at William & Mary Law School and the Coastal Node Commonwealth Cyber Initiative Research Scientist. With an extensive technical and technology background, Daniel focuses his research on the intersection of emerging technology and law, including as it pertains to blockchain technology, the Internet of Things, and artificial intelligence. One of his research interest centers around the implications of deep-fakes technology and its role in facilitating disinformation campaigns. 

 

Daniel also publishes the CLCT Cybersecurity and Information Security Newsletter, a monthly newsletter that covers cybersecurity and information security events with the accompanying legal analysis. Past issues of the newsletter examined major cybersecurity incidents of critical infrastructure, government cybersecurity regulations, and court decisions impacting cybersecurity laws. 

 

Daniel Shin is a licensed attorney in Virginia and a Certified Information Privacy Professional – United States (CIPP/US). He is a graduate of Northwestern University (B.A.), Mannheim Universität (M.A.), and William & Mary Law School (J.D.). 

Daniel Shin's articles (2)

On 25 July 2024, the U.S. Department of State published its “Risk Management Profile for Artificial Intelligence and Human Rights”, which applied the National Institute of Standards and Technology’s AI Risk Management Framework to the human rights context.

On 15-16 February 2023, the first global summit on Responsible Artificial Intelligence in the Military Domain (REAIM) was held in the Netherlands. The US used the summit as an opportunity to put forth their “Political Declaration on Responsible Military Use of Artificial Intelligence and Autonomy.” In this blog, we begin by looking at the US’s latest development in promoting the adoption of responsible AI in the military, before briefly discussing investments into the military across the US and China, as well as the implications of AI in military capabilities on a macro-level, making a case for the growing importance of risk management and auditable methodologies.