The devil's advisor - or: How students deal with the EU AI Act in a corporate context via 'ethical hacking'

Project: BreAkIng Bad: Hacking the AI Act

Information about the Interview Series

Spotlight: Data Literacy Teaching Lab

In our series 'Spotlight: Data Literacy Teaching Lab' we talk to teachers whose teaching projects were funded by the Digital and Data Literacy in Teaching Lab (DDLitLab) at the University of Hamburg. What were the innovative ideas of the projects? What were the special didactic and content-related challenges, but also highlights? And are there perhaps concrete tips for other teachers who also want to start a new teaching project and are looking for experience reports? We clarify this and more in our look at and behind the scenes. Spotlight on!

Concept & Production: Julia Pawlowski, Sven Rehder, Simon Steinhauser, unterstützt von Laura Aguilera

Everyone is talking about AI. In countless companies, this technology is already an integral part of value creation in a wide variety of forms. The EU’s AI Act is intended to prevent the harmful consequences of using AI. However, as with all complex regulations, this results in a balancing act for companies between economic efficiency and legal compliance. This in turn always leads to loopholes and grey areas being exploited in such a way that ethical principles no longer apply.

In the interdisciplinary course run by Dr Michaela Regnieri and Lucas Memmert, students from all subjects not only learn about the AI Act and ethical perspectives on AI. With the help of the consulting firm iDIGMA, students literally become management consultants over the course of a semester and consciously explore the limits of AI regulation.

The aim is to identify weaknesses in the AI Act for the corporate context using ethical hacking, to develop ideas for strengthening the AI Act and to sensitise students to the complex decision-making processes regarding the use of AI in companies.

In doing so, students develop their own critical attitude and experience directly what the tension between economic efficiency and ethical action means, and that there can always be win-win ways out of the obvious grey areas towards the good.

BreAkIng Bad’ thus becomes “Great power grows great responsibility” - and with it the future competence of ethical and economic behaviour.

The interdisciplinary teaching project “BreAkIng Bad: Hacking the AI Act” was successfully carried out in 2023 and 2024. The teaching project was funded by the Digital and Data Literacy in Teaching Lab (DDLitLab for short) and was offered on an interdisciplinary basis in the Studium Generale programme at the University of Hamburg.

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