Innovation with data and AI requires more than just safeguarding privacy risks. Especially when things become complex—where ethics, human rights, and compliance intersect—it is essential that the right people come together and engage in meaningful dialogue. A DPIAMA combines a DPIA and an IAMA, bringing business, development teams, and compliance together at one table.
In our High on AI-podcast, we talk through the real world stories and use cases of business and organizations successfully introducing AI into their everyday work lives, to do all the things AI promises to do, can do and more.
In daily work in the field of responsible digitization, it is clear that sustainability and digitization have a lot in common. Both strive for value creation, involve substantive complexity, and require a similar search for ownership.
Our environment demands more and more from (government) service delivery. Service must comply with laws and regulations, restore the human dimension, and be more sustainable. Each organization has its own beliefs and priorities in this regard. This diversity of expectations raises the question, 'How do we make progress at all?'
Sustainability is a hot topic. Organizations think it's important, but then…, ‘what can I do about it?’. And ‘what difference does my effort make now?’. Do I act on the bare necessaties for window dressing purposes, or does it really make sense for my organization to do 'something with sustainability' now? The answer is ‘Yes!’. Acting on sustainability really makes sense. And there are several reasons for that.