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Mehtab Khan’s scholarship intersects intellectual property, in particular copyright and trademark law, internet law, privacy, anti-discrimination, and law and ethics of data-driven technologies. She is interested in how technology impacts society, and analyzing the role of law in mitigating and shaping that impact. Her recent academic scholarship includes articles on developing an accountability framework for large-scale AI datasets, regulating Generative AI speech tools, and the impact of AI on the creative industries. As a Fellow at the Berkman Klein Center, she will continue to work on these issues. Her current research looks at the mechanisms for governing the data that is used to develop and deploy AI technologies. She is particularly interested in how to ensure diversity and representation in the development process, and the ways in which the harms and impacts overlook marginalized groups. Her doctoral dissertation, completed at Berkeley Law, examines the role of copyright in shaping access to knowledge. This research was partly inspired by challenges internet users face to access knowledge and the ways platforms like Google and Wikipedia navigate complex copyright rules to make knowledge accessible. Mehtab Khan was previously a Resident Fellow at the Information Society Project at Yale Law School. At Yale, she was also the Program Director for the Yale/Wikimedia Initiative on Intermediaries and Information. She has been a visiting researcher at Stanford HAI. She is a recipient of numerous grants to work on the use of AI in hiring. She was a Fellow at the Center for Technology, Society and Policy in 2019, and a Research Grantee at the Center for Long-Term Cybersecurity Mehtab is a licensed attorney and she has previously worked as a lawyer in the United States, Malaysia, and Pakistan. She has done stints at the Wikimedia Foundation, Creative Commons, and the Electronic Frontier Foundation—three Bay Area institutions that have been at the forefront of many legal battles around digital rights. She holds an LLM and JSD from University of California, Berkeley School of Law.