Matt Thompsett

(he/him)

Matt Thompsett

Green Lemon Company

Founder & Chief Vision Officer

ABOUT THE SPEAKER

Matt Thompsett is a technology leader and founder focused on building responsible, AI-native software businesses. As Founder and Chief Vision Officer at Green Lemon Company, he leads the development of accessible, ethical and high-impact digital solutions for clients across industries. With a strong belief that technology should be a force for good, Matt champions inclusion, accessibility and responsible AI. He works closely with teams, clients and partners to deliver innovative solutions while embedding governance, ethics and purpose into every aspect of technology delivery.

Sessions

Matt Thompsett

Amber Foster

Matthew Holman

Lucia Bertello

Jacob Allen

AI Safety, Trust & Control: Governing Intelligent Systems in the Agentic Era

As artificial intelligence moves rapidly from experimentation into operational reality, organisations face an urgent challenge: how do we innovate at speed without losing control, trust or accountability? Facilitated by Matt Thompsett of Green Lemon Company, this panel brings together technology leaders, practitioners and industry voices to explore how we govern increasingly intelligent, autonomous and agentic systems. Moving beyond abstract ethics theory, the discussion will focus on the practical risks now emerging as AI becomes embedded into products, services, operations and wider digital infrastructure. From AI safety, security and data sovereignty to bias, transparency, explainability and regulation, the panel will examine what responsible leadership looks like when AI systems are becoming more powerful, distributed and harder to oversee. A key focus will be the growing challenge of agent sprawl, where teams deploy AI tools, copilots and autonomous workflows faster than governance models can keep up. The panel will explore how organisations can maintain visibility, control and human oversight without slowing innovation to a standstill. Rather than positioning governance as a barrier, the session will explore how strong safety frameworks, operational controls and organisational readiness can become competitive advantages, helping organisations adopt AI confidently, sustainably and responsibly. For founders, executives, architects, policymakers and delivery leaders alike, this panel offers a timely opportunity to understand what it will take to build, deploy and govern intelligent systems we can genuinely trust.

Matt Thompsett

Amber Foster

Matthew Holman

Lucia Bertello

Jacob Allen

AI Safety, Trust & Control: Governing Intelligent Systems in the Agentic Era

As artificial intelligence moves rapidly from experimentation into operational reality, organisations face an urgent challenge: how do we innovate at speed without losing control, trust or accountability? Facilitated by Matt Thompsett of Green Lemon Company, this panel brings together technology leaders, practitioners and industry voices to explore how we govern increasingly intelligent, autonomous and agentic systems. Moving beyond abstract ethics theory, the discussion will focus on the practical risks now emerging as AI becomes embedded into products, services, operations and wider digital infrastructure. From AI safety, security and data sovereignty to bias, transparency, explainability and regulation, the panel will examine what responsible leadership looks like when AI systems are becoming more powerful, distributed and harder to oversee. A key focus will be the growing challenge of agent sprawl, where teams deploy AI tools, copilots and autonomous workflows faster than governance models can keep up. The panel will explore how organisations can maintain visibility, control and human oversight without slowing innovation to a standstill. Rather than positioning governance as a barrier, the session will explore how strong safety frameworks, operational controls and organisational readiness can become competitive advantages, helping organisations adopt AI confidently, sustainably and responsibly. For founders, executives, architects, policymakers and delivery leaders alike, this panel offers a timely opportunity to understand what it will take to build, deploy and govern intelligent systems we can genuinely trust.