Tabitha Goldstaub

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Tabitha Goldstaub
Goldstaub at DDaT talk 'All About People' in 2018
Alma materUniversity of the Arts London Wimbledon College of Arts
OrganizationCognitionX
Known forArtificial Intelligence Innovation in tech
Websitehttps://cognitionx.com/

Tabitha Goldstaub MBE [1] is a British tech entrepreneur who specialises in communicating the impact of artificial intelligence.[2][3] She is the co-founder of CogX,[4] a festival and online platform. She is also the chair of the UK government's AI Council,[5] a member of the DCMS Digitial Economy Council [6] and on the TechUK board.[7] A serial entrepreneur, she was the co-founder of video distribution company Rightster (IPO 2011). Tabitha is the author of How To Talk To Robots - A Girls' Guide to a World Dominated by AI.[8][9] She's also an advisor to Tortoise Media,[10] Raspberry Pi,[11] CarbonRe,[12] Monumo, Cambridge Innovation Capital [13] and The Alan Turing Institute.[14]

Early life and education[edit]

Goldstaub attended Bedales School, which she graduated in 2004.[15] Her mother is Jane Procter, who edited Tatler magazine for nine years.[16][17][18] She completed an Art Foundation in graphic design at Wimbledon College of Arts. She earned a bachelor's degree in Advertising at University of the Arts London.[19]

Career[edit]

After graduating, Goldstaub joined online television network t5m, where she became Director of Video Syndication.[19] Here she spotted market space to "help rights holders, brands and influencers distribute and monetise their content".[20][18][19] Goldstaub went on to co-found Righster (now Brave Bison) in 2011 with entrepreneur Charlie Muirhead. She held roles as head of brand solutions, head of fashion, marketing director and general manager of the New York office.[21][19][18] In 2012 The Guardian partnered with Righster to improve their YouTube content.[22] Righster floated in November 2013 for £20.4 million.[23] She was key in organising the first instances of live streaming from London Fashion Week, with IMG and the British Fashion Council.[24] In 2012 she was listed in Media Week's "30 Under 30".[25] In 2014 she was listed in the London Evening Standard newspaper's Silicon 60.[26]

Goldstaub is the co-founder of CognitionX, “Expert Advice Platform”.[27][28][29] This organisation was created with the intention to offer business the chance to learn about and use AI.[30] Goldstaub is particularly concerned about AI's potential for gender bias, “When you look at what’s going on in AI with a feminist cap on, it becomes very apparent that the biases that already exist in society will be exacerbated or reinforced,”.[31] In an interview with London Evening Standard, she compared AI to a child, "learning from what it hears...If you train AI based on racist, sexist information, you can’t be surprised that it becomes racist and sexist".[32]

In June 2017, Goldstaub arranged the inaugural CogX, a two-day ‘Innovation Exchange’ for 1,500 delegates discussing how AI will shape the future of society.[33][34] CogX 2018 saw 6,500 attendees and over 370 speakers at Tobacco Dock.[35]

In October 2017 Marie Claire described Goldstaub as a Future Shaper.[36] She was listed in the London Evening Standard's "The Progress 1000: London's most influential people".[37] Goldstaub lives by the Karen Spärck Jones quotation "computing is too important to be left to men".[38] She is represented by Curtis Brown (literary agents).[39]

Goldstaub led the team that wrote a report for the Mayor of London’s Office, which analysed the AI ecosystem in London.[40] The final report, which looks at London’s unique strengths as a global hub of AI, found that London was the AI capital of Europe; highlights include the fact that London hosts over 750 AI suppliers.[41]

In June 2018 Goldstaub was named Head of the UK Government's AI Council (part of the government's new Office for Artificial Intelligence) and as 'AI Business Champion' by then Secretary of State for DCMS, Matt Hancock.[42]

In 2019, Goldstaub became a member of the TechUK board. The board works together to ensure the UK realises the positive potential of tech.

In 2020, Goldstaub released her first book entitled How To Talk To Robots: A Girls’ Guide To a Future Dominated by AI (published by HarperCollins Publishers Limited). A girls guide to Artificial Intelligence. The book breaks down the tech-bro barriers offering a straightforward introduction and makes clear the enormous benefits of understanding AI.

In July 2021, Goldstaub became an Advisor to The Alan Turing Institute and in October 2021, she became an Advisor to Raspberry Pi Foundation.

Goldstaub was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 2022 New Year Honours for services to the artificial intelligence sector.[43]

Education and advocacy[edit]

Goldstaub co-founded Future Girl Corp with Sharmadean Reid in 2016.[44] They offer a series of free monthly events promoting women's entrepreneurship.[45][46] In March 2017, Goldstaub ran a Future Girl Corp lecture on creating user profiles for business.[47] She regularly advises London based start-ups.[19] Goldstaub is a mentor for young women tech founders, including Zoe Partridge of fashion rental startup We Are the Walk.[48]

Goldstaub co-founded Project Placed, which looks to enhance experiential learning, by pairing students with businesses for experience-based learning during their university degrees, in 2017.[49][50] That year she chaired the "Fixing Education For The AI Age" discussion at DLD Conference.[51][52] She is on the Marketing Advisory Council for Founders 4 Schools, a UK Charity which connects students to local business leaders.[53]

In October 2018 Goldstaub was awarded the Amy Johnson Inspiration Award by the Women's Engineering Society for using her positions in highly visible roles with government and the London mayor's office to promote diversity in tech.[54]

References[edit]

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  11. ^ The future of AI education in UK schools — panel | Computing education research, retrieved 2022-03-16
  12. ^ "Climate Technology Leaders & Sustainability Experts in the UK & Germany". Carbon Re. Retrieved 2022-03-16.
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  16. ^ "About". janeprocter. Retrieved 2018-02-20.
  17. ^ "Paul Edmonds Opening". donfeatures.photoshelter.com. Retrieved 2018-02-20.
  18. ^ a b c O'Conor, Lottie (2014-12-19). "10 minutes with... Tabitha Goldstaub, co-founder of Rightster". the Guardian. Retrieved 2018-02-20.
  19. ^ a b c d e "Tabitha Goldstaub". SheCanCode. Retrieved 2018-02-20.
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  22. ^ office, GNM press (2012-05-29). "Guardian News & Media press release: Guardian partners Rightster to enhance its YouTube presence". the Guardian. Retrieved 2018-02-20.
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  29. ^ "About CognitionX - Our mission". CognitionX. Retrieved 2018-02-20.
  30. ^ Mark, Skilton (2018). The 4th Industrial Revolution : Responding to the Impact of Artificial Intelligence on Business. Hovsepian, Felix. Cham. p. 201. ISBN 978-3319624792. OCLC 1013884032.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
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  36. ^ "From A Fashion Leader To A Humanitarian Hero, Meet Our 2017 Future Shapers". Marie Claire. 2017-10-06. Retrieved 2018-02-20.
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  48. ^ Bateman, Jessica (2017-01-16). "'She's been life changing': Why female mentors matter in tech". the Guardian. Retrieved 2018-02-20.
  49. ^ "Students". Project Placed. Retrieved 2018-02-20.
  50. ^ Curda, Pavel (6 February 2017). "A.I. will give students the skills needed for the future workforce – an interview with Tabitha Goldstaub | EU-Startups". www.eu-startups.com. Retrieved 2018-02-20.
  51. ^ "DLD Conference - DLD17: 'Fixing Education For The AI Age (co-created by CognitionX)' with Conrad Wolfram, Juergen Schmidhuber, Tabitha Goldstaub, Rose Luckin moderated by Charlie Muirhead". DLD Conference. Retrieved 2018-02-20.
  52. ^ DLDconference (2017-01-23), Fixing Education For The AI Age (Goldstaub, Luckin, Schmidhuber, Wolfram, Muirhead) | DLD17, retrieved 2018-02-20
  53. ^ "Founders4Schools". www.founders4schools.org.uk. Retrieved 2018-02-20.
  54. ^ "Amy Johnson Inspiration Award | Women's Engineering Society". www.wes.org.uk. Retrieved 2018-12-16.