Laws, regulations, and policies are no sooner established than they are overtaken by a new technological advancement that necessitates their reconfiguration. While institutions, in their varied roles, strive to anticipate the future to prepare effectively for it and develop appropriate plans and strategies, theyfind themselves caught off guard by the rapidity with which the future unfolds, compelling them to grapple with its implications, both positive and negative, in an immediate and ad hoc manner, as if “improvisation” has become one of the tools for dealing with this new reality.