CCI at DWeb Camp 2024

 

CCI at DWeb Camp 2024

Reflections on our Co-Design and path forward

Systemic change to legitimize gig work won't come from band-aid solutions.

Jennelyn Tumalad Bailon and Val Elefante presenting at the Redwood Grove at the 2024 DWeb Camp in Navarro, California. Photo credit: Jessica Mele

Research to Impact Lab's Senior Program Associate, Jennelyn Tumalad Bailon, and Enterprise Development Consultant, Val Elefante, facilitated a co-design for our gig worker savings club incubation project, currently known as "Cookie Jar Collective."

We welcomed 27 participants interested in helping us build a product that could facilitate shared accountability, community, and collective power centered on growing savings for gig workers.

Participants heard an overview of the purpose and journey CCI has taken to reach this point. They also spent time brainstorming and drawing different aspects of the product ranging from governance, UX design, and tech stack.

Watch the in-depth overview of our presentation, key takeaways, and next steps for this project in the video below.


Learnings and Ethical Considerations: A Resource for Arts Funders on Artificial Intelligence

Learnings and Ethical Considerations: A Resource for Arts Funders on Artificial Intelligence

A helpful resource for funders interested in moving ethically in the Artificial Intelligence (AI) space

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As Artificial Intelligence (“AI”) transforms various sectors, it is crucial to evaluate both the pros and cons of AI-integrated projects. As arts’ funders, it is our duty to safeguard human creativity, ownership rights, and data privacy for creators and cultural communities in grantmaking processes.

Research to Impact Lab staff designed a workshop for the 2024 Grantmakers in the Arts' Support for Individual Artists Preconference: The Future is AI? Equipping Artists for the Digital Renaissance.

The R2I Lab’s workshop, Fast Technology, Slow Regulations: Intellectual Property and Artificial Intelligence, featured a discussion on current AI regulations as well as the ethical and social implications  amid rapid technology adoption and limited data protection measures.

The workshop featured tangible and immediate protections that funders can support to address  artists' intellectual property concerns and offered strategic possibilities for funders interested in supporting more structural changes impacting individual artists and vulnerable communities.

The workshop finished with a hands-on activity where funders could practice intentional discovery and due diligence on a project involving AI technology.

This resource expands on the workshop content, providing a comprehensive list of due diligence questions and implementation strategies for arts funders evaluating AI-integrated project proposals.

Download the resource