< session />

Who Owns the Code That AI Writes

With more than 80 AI coding tools available today, and projections exceeding 270 by 2027, product managers, designers, and other “citizen engineers” can now generate and ship code directly. This shift is redefining how software teams collaborate and raising a crucial question: who owns the code that AI creates? Ownership, testing, and control are becoming central challenges in an environment where code is no longer written exclusively by developers.

This session examines how AI is transforming the software development lifecycle and what it means for accountability and quality. Attendees will learn how to design collaborative workflows that safely integrate AI-generated code into production environments without losing structure, reliability, or maintainability. The talk also explores how engineers and non-engineers can adapt to evolving roles, establishing architectural patterns that support modular delivery, dynamic inputs, and continuous oversight.

What You Will Learn

  • How AI is reshaping code ownership, accountability, and collaboration in modern teams

  • Practical frameworks for incorporating AI-generated code safely and effectively

  • Architectural patterns and team practices that balance speed, quality, and governance

Who Should Attend

Engineering leaders, software architects, developers, product managers, and designers interested in managing the impact of AI-generated code on team workflows, product quality, and long-term maintainability.

< speaker_info />

About the speaker

Keren Fenan

CEO and Co-Founder, Myop.dev

Keren Fanan is the co-founder and CEO of Myop, a developer-first platform transforming how UI and UX are built, controlled and optimized in production.

Keren has held key leadership positions at Moon Active and Gett and has a proven track record of success in scaling startups, launching strategic partnerships and driving profitability.
At Gett, a global B2B transportation leader and unicorn, Keren served as Chief Revenue Officer and GM Enterprise. She was instrumental in scaling the company from its early stages to over $200 million in revenue, leading international SaaS strategy and overseeing marketing, sales, and business development.

Following Gett, Keren joined Moon Active, a $5B gaming company, as VP of Product & Monetization. There, she led cross-functional teams, shaped product direction, and grew average daily revenue from $10K to $200K, contributing to over $1.5B in total revenue.

Keren is a passionate advocate for women’s inclusion in tech and serves as a board member at Women in Tech (WIT). She also actively mentors and supports the next generation of female tech leaders.