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Giuseppe Bianco

Lead Coordinator
OECD
Participates in 1 Session

Lead Coordinator on cross-regulatory digital cooperation (finance and competition) at the Data Flows, Governance and Privacy Division of the OECD.
Prior to this, he has been a banking regulation expert at Banca d'Italia and an international finance and development fellow at the IMF.
He teaches International Financial Regulation at Sciences Po. He has published widely, including a monograph on sovereign debt restructuring. He obtained a PhD in International Economic Law (Oslo and Sorbonne Universities) and an LLM (New York University). He is an attorney in New York and has been a visiting scholar at the Lauterpacht Centre, University of Cambridge.

Sessions in which Giuseppe Bianco participates

Tuesday 13 May, 2025

Time Zone: (GMT+01:00) Rome
3:00 PM
3:00 PM - 4:00 PM | 1 hour
International Cooperation
Socio-economic perspectiveInterpretation available

The role of data regulations in enabling economic growth is currently a topic of intense interest in many parts of the world. Attendees of this enriching session will hear discussions on the nature and design of data regulations, and balances to be struck, including the extent to which regulators seek to enable good outcomes as well as prevent bad ones.  Key questions 

Sessions in which Giuseppe Bianco attends

Monday 12 May, 2025

Time Zone: (GMT+01:00) Rome
9:00 AM
9:00 AM - 9:30 AM | 30 minutes
AI and Compliance
Artificial IntelligenceInnovative TechnologiesInterpretation available

The AI and Compliance track serves as a dynamic platform for dialogue, knowledge exchange, and collaboration on the evolving legal and regulatory landscape of AI, in addition to its increasing involvement in all aspects of our personal and professional lives. This opening session brings together distinguished Italian academics, officials of the region and the Director of the Privacy Symposium to set the stage for insightful discu...

9:30 AM
9:30 AM - 10:30 AM | 1 hour
Research and Innovation
Cybersecurity

Compliance with the AI Act relies a great deal on robust risk management.  However, small and medium entreprises (SMEs) often do not have a risk management policy in place and it is difficult for them to identify, analyse, assess, and mitigate risks related to AI systems privacy and security. On the other hand, whichever methodology an organisation chooses, the underlying cybersecurity and privacy issues that accompany the use of AI systems remain technically the same. This session will ...