We’re failing at the ethics of AI. Here’s how we make real impact
We don’t have the luxury of failing at the ethics of AI - but we are. For real impact, we must address three pivotal issues.
Chair, Technology and Ethics Studies, and current Scholar, Consultant and Author, Interdisciplinary Center for Bioethics, Yale University, Senior Adviser, Hastings Center, and Fellow, Center for Law, Science and Innovation, Sandra Day O'Connor School of Law, Arizona State University. Co-Chair, Global Future Council on Technology, Values and Policy, World Economic Forum. Author of "A Dangerous Master: How to keep technology from slipping beyond our control", a primer on emerging technologies; Co-Author, "Moral Machines: Teaching Robots Right From Wrong". Editor, eight volume library of essays on the "Ethics of Emerging Technologies" (2016).
We don’t have the luxury of failing at the ethics of AI - but we are. For real impact, we must address three pivotal issues.
How can we create policies that ensure our most critical values are protected from any unintentional effects of new technology?