About the Author
Kim was born in Seoul and fascinated by technology from childhood. In school, she built robots out of spare parts and joined teen hackathons. At university, her passion shifted toward artificial intelligence, especially autonomous systems and their ethical implications. Her dissertation became one of the first in South Korea to seriously address the legal and moral dimensions of AI.
What sets Kim apart is her ability to combine deep technical expertise with a humanistic view of technology. She believes algorithms aren’t just lines of code, but reflections of society’s values. In her articles, she often raises questions about accountability in AI decisions and how technology should serve people — not the other way around.
In life, she is energetic and open, drawn to vibrant urban culture, and passionate about graphic design and music. In teaching, she mixes hands-on demonstrations with discussions about real-world consequences. To her students, she shows that a programmer can be more than an engineer — they can be a philosopher of the digital age.
Writing Style
Kim guides readers through algorithms the way a pop-culture fan talks about their favorite movies: clear, engaging, and full of examples anyone can get. Her writing blends lively storytelling with razor-sharp logic: “Think of a neural network as a Matrix hero learning to tell cats from dogs pixel by pixel — the way Neo learns to stop bullets.” She never trades accuracy for simplicity; instead, she finds comparisons that make even the most complex models suddenly click. With Kim, machine learning doesn’t feel like a dry lecture — it’s an adventure where every step makes sense and the ending is always rewarding. It’s as if she’s saying: “Let’s unpack how this works — and why it’s awesome.”
Visual Style
A sleek digital style with neon highlights. The backdrop flows like data streams and glowing holograms, while the portrait is enhanced with subtle techno details that reflect her deep connection with AI and digital systems.