NativeBio is a global leader in creating safe data sharing tools for our multipolar future. The jostling for position in an ever competitive data and artificial intelligence market
has the potential to become culturally, economically and physically violent. In this competition and race to elucidate or make practical new resources, Indigenous spaces and knowledge are now and long been low hanging fruit for tech startups. Very few, if any, systems protect or regulate data from powerless or impoverished populations. The United Nations has made some attempts but it's long been compromised by Western thinking. Therefore, Indigenous Knowledge and/or data, once collected is used in any way the UN and its members choose to use it and interpret it without any Indigenous involvement. The principles of an Ethical Protocol for the Protection and Use of Traditional Indigenous Knowledge include Ownership by the Peoples it comes from; Control over how it is used; Accessibility by those who shared it; and a recognition that it belongs to the Peoples who shared it as delineated in the CARE principles. This talk will demonstrate how CARE, Federated Data sharing and other mechanisms can make things equitable for underprivileged populations but also an increasingly competitive and violent world.
Presented by:
Amerindigenous Scientist at the Native BioData Consortium
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Please join on May 14-15, 2026