AI Insights
Gaia Dynamics Welcomes Carlos Alzate as Chief Technology Officer

Former CTO at Andrew Ng’s AI Fund and IBM Research leader brings global expertise in AI and machine learning to advance Gaia’s mission of transforming global trade compliance
PALO ALTO, Calif., Sept. 16, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — Gaia Dynamics, the leading AI-driven trade compliance platform, today announced Carlos Alzate has joined as the company’s first Chief Technology Officer. Carlos brings decades of experience in artificial intelligence, machine learning research, and leadership to Gaia Dynamics as the company experiences accelerated growth from customers requesting trade and compliance support.
“The trade and compliance industry is under more pressure than ever, with global tariffs and regulations creating new challenges for businesses worldwide,” said Carlos Alzate, Chief Technology Officer of Gaia Dynamics. “Gaia’s AI-powered platform is uniquely positioned to help companies navigate this environment with speed and confidence. I’m excited to bring my experience in building advanced AI systems to support Gaia’s mission and help take the company to the next level as the leading solution in this critical industry.”
Most recently, Carlos served as CTO at AI Fund, where he guided AI technology strategy and product innovation. Earlier in his career, he led a research group at IBM Research in Ireland, where he directed teams working on cutting-edge projects, including Project Debater, IBM’s next Grand Challenge following Watson.
Carlos has a Ph.D and master’s degrees in AI from KU Leuven in Belgium, as well as a bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering from the Universidad Nacional de Colombia.
“Carlos brings an extraordinary depth of knowledge in artificial intelligence, from pioneering research to leading global teams,” said Emil Stefanutti, CEO of Gaia Dynamics. “Modern AI represents the only non-political solution to manage the massively increasing volumes, scrutiny, and sheer complexity of global trade. Carlos’ expertise will be instrumental in scaling Gaia Dynamics to deliver the next generation of our platform to importers and exporters of any product, any industry, anywhere in the world.”
At Gaia Dynamics, Carlos will lead the company’s technology vision, overseeing the continued development of its AI-powered trade compliance platform and guiding innovation to help businesses navigate the complexities of global trade.
To learn more, please visit: https://www.gaiadynamics.ai/.
About Gaia Dynamics
Gaia Dynamics is an AI-driven trade technology platform founded in 2025 in partnership with Andrew Ng’s AI Fund. Headquartered in Palo Alto, California, the company leverages cutting-edge artificial intelligence to simplify complex processes in tariff classification, regulatory compliance and supply chain optimization. Gaia Dynamics equips customs brokers, consultants and brands with the tools they need to navigate global trade with ease. To learn more, please visit: https://www.gaiadynamics.ai/.
AI Insights
Three eastern Iowa students charged in nude AI-generated photos case

CASCADE, Iowa — Three Cascade High School students accused of creating fake nude images of other students with artificial intelligence have been charged, according to the Western Dubuque Community School District.
Iowa Public Radio reported back in May, that a group of students allegedly attached the victims’ headshots on other images of nude bodies. School officials say they first were made aware of the images on March 25.
The school district says “any student charged as a creator or distributor of materials like those in question will not be permitted to attend school in person at Cascade Junior/Senior High School.”
The district would not give many more details in the case due to the ongoing investigation and their “legal obligation to maintain student confidentiality.”
AI Insights
5 Key Takeaways | The Law of the Machine (Learning): Solving Complex AI Challenges | Kilpatrick

As businesses are under increasing pressure to develop and deploy artificial intelligence (AI) tools, their legal departments are facing new challenges at this intersection of innovation, compliance, and risk. Recently, Kilpatrick’s Mike Breslin, Meghan Farmer, and Greg Silberman joined Rome Perlman, Associate General Counsel, National Student Clearinghouse, to explore some of the more subtle and complex issues in the AI legal landscape and provide practical tips for in-house counsel who need to quickly assess and manage their clients’ use and deployment of advanced AI systems. The discussion, sponsored by the Association of Corporate Counsel (ACC) Capital Region Chapter, addressed these topics through the lenses of risk management, regulatory compliance, data privacy, model governance, contracting considerations, and incident classification and response.
Mike, Meghan, and Greg offer the following takeaways from the discussion:
1. Data Underpins Model Performance, Governance, and Risk Mitigation.
High-quality, well-managed data ensures AI model reliability, drives continuous improvement, and provides meaningful context. Establish data management protocols that address collection, storage, processing, and disposal, embed privacy-by-design and track data provenance. Use robust data controls to enable governance, support compliance, and build trust in AI systems.
2. Responsible AI Requires Accountability, Transparency, and Human Oversight.
Organizations must assess AI systems for impact, identify adverse effects, and design for informed human control. Provide clear disclosures about AI capabilities and limitations, and state when content or interactions are AI-generated. Human oversight and regular policy reviews are vital to maintaining ethical and compliant AI use.
3. Classify and Respond to AI Incidents to Manage Risk Effectively.
AI incidents are not just another type of cybersecurity incident. Systematically classifying by domain, root cause, lifecycle stage, and responsible owner is critical for effective response. This enables prompt containment, accurate evidence preservation, clear accountability, and tailored remediation. Apply consistent classification to support trend analysis and continuous improvement across teams.
4. Adopt Best Practices in AI Contracting.
Define permitted uses, clearly allocate IP ownership and data training rights, mandate data governance and privacy compliance, and set performance and bias standards. Require transparency, audit rights, and termination provisions for compliance failures. Continuously monitor contract performance and regulatory developments to manage evolving risks.
5. Implement Practical Controls and Education for Safe, Fair, and Effective AI Use.
Mitigate AI risks with layered controls, including human oversight, privacy-by-design, secure coding, data provenance tracking, and documented policies. Train employees regularly on AI policies, known limitations (such as hallucinations and data retention), and verification of AI outputs. Regularly review and update policies to address new risks.
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