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About Me

Yuna Noh

I am a licensed attorney in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts and focus on artificial intelligence and technology law. I received my J.D. from Harvard Law School in 2022. I am a tech entrepreneur and head a fashion supply chain AI start-up, as a co-partner and general counsel. 

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You can connect with me at yuna.noh@yunanoh.com

I lead a fashion AI start-up composed of a wholesale business model and an AI-driven technology that connects businesses to supply chain partners, such as factories, inspectors, sourcing agents, shippers, and distributors.

 

I have work experience with Bae, Kim & Lee LLC corporate law division in South Korea, where I conducted research on shareholder activism trends and assisted with M&A transactions, the private office of Sang-Hun Kim, former CEO of Naver Corporation, the largest search engine provider and a major AI solutions provider in South Korea, and the office of Sora Noh, former Seoul District Court judge in South Korea, for whom I worked on intellectual property matters, such as fair uses and transformative uses.

 

For 6 years and 5 months, I served as the Editor-in-Chief of The Parliamentary Network Review at The Parliamentary Network on the World Bank and International Monetary Fund under then President MP Jeremy Lefroy and MP Göran Pettersson and oversaw the publication of a quarterly journal of international development and cooperation, distributed to Network’s more than 1,000 member parliamentarians in over 140 countries.

 

I worked at the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization in Rome, Italy promoting food security and sustainable ecosystems and the Swedish Parliament (Sveriges Riksdag) for then Chairman of Swedish-American Relations Board where I presented a seminar for then South Korean Ambassador to Sweden.

 

I advocated for refugee rights at Citizens’ Alliance for North Korean Human Rights in cooperation with Filippino advocacy groups and the Embassy of Netherlands and submitted findings to the United Nations Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances. I served on the Youth Outreach Committee for a Ahn Cheol-soo's South Korean presidential campaign. I also worked at Samsung Economic Research Institute (SERI).

Harvard Law School, J.D., Cambridge, MA, USA    Class of 2022

Primary focus on technology & intellectual property law

Honors & Distinctions. Dean’s Scholar Prize x 2 (2020, 2021)

 

Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, USA    Class of 2016

B.A. English | summa cum laude | GPA 3.99/4.00 | Highest Class/Departmental GPA | Early Induction to Phi Beta Kappa (top 2% of the graduating class)​

Honors & Distinctions. Class of 1958 Prize in Honor of Ernest Hemingway, Human Value Prize, Carolyn L. Drucker Class of 1980 Prize, Class of 1870 Prize, Emily Ebert Prize, Scott Berg Award, Quin Morton ’36 Writing Prize, Ward Mathis Prize, Dean’s Letter (all 4 years), Comparative Literature Dept. Research Grant, IIP Grants (2013, 2014), Norman Mailer Writer’s Colony Non-Fiction National Semi-Finalist

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Phillips Exeter Academy, Exeter, NH, USA    Class of 2011

Highest Honors | Early Induction to Phi Beta Kappa | The Cox Medal

 

Oxford University LawTech Education Programme, Artificial Intelligence University Foundations

Completed modules on AI technology, law, and ethics​

Education

Interests in AI Law & Governance

AI and Insurance Regimes

Addressing both catastrophic and everyday risks posed by AI requires innovative insurance solutions and clear liability regimes.

Agentic AI and Autonomous Agents

Agentic AI poses a wide range of risks stemming from both misuse and misalignment.

AI-Related Cybersecurity Risks

AI-related cybersecurity risks include data poisoning, prompt injection, memory manipulation, and unauthorized access.

AI and Intellectual Property

AI systems, particularly generative models, raise significant intellectual property challenges, as their training and outputs can lead to copyright infringement and uncertainty over ownership and legal liability. 

AI Use in Supply Chains

AI is transforming supply chain networks by connecting supply chain actors with businesses, automating processes, and optimizing logistics and inventory management.

AI and the Rule of Law

AI challenges the rule of law by raising concerns about fairness, transparency, accountability, and legal certainty, as opaque algorithms and data-driven decisions can undermine equal treatment and due process.

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