International Translation Day 2024 Webinar

Join us for our International Translation Day 2024 Webinar, featuring a panel discussion and Q&A

Where:

Date:

Online – ZOOM

Friday, September 27, 2024
2 pm to 3:30 pm Paris (UTC+2)
8am to 9:30am New York
8pm to 9:30pm Beijing
10pm to 11:30pm Sydney

Theme: Translation, an art worth protecting –
improving good translation as an art, possibilities, and pitfalls

Based on the ITD theme for 2024, this panel discussion will explore the issues of copyright, language rights and the future of the profession in the context of recent technological change.

Good translation is an art worth protecting. Poor translation is not. In the light of the recent technological developments, artificial intelligence (generative AI), LLM (Large Language Models), improved neural machine translation, we will discuss if and how we can improve good translation as an art, possibilities, and pitfalls. What are opportunities, what are threats? Its violation of copyrights. Its machine generated literature. 

Translation is many things: literary, audiovisual, scientific, legal, technical, financial, etc. Its terminology, its culture, its locale, its style, its target groups and intended readers. Its translanguaging and text-generative AI.

Can text-generative AI technology support translanguaging practices and multilingual communicative competence, or do we risk the technology creating (even) greater linguistic uniformity?
Based on the ITD theme for 2024, the webinar seeks to explore the issues of copyright, language rights and the future of the profession in the context of recent technological change.

Panelists

Cristina Valentini, Head of Terminology Unit, World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO). Cristina Valentini

Tex Texin, Internationalisation Architect Technology Strategy Advisor, Translation Commons. Tex Texin

Marie Diur, Head of interpreting, United Nations. Marie Diur

Prof. Dr. Ivan Bratko, Computer Scientist and AI specialist, Slovene Academy of Science & Arts, University of Ljubljana. Prof. Dr. Ivan Bratko