Caroline Lester, The New Yorker; A Study on Driverless-Car Ethics Offers a Troubling Look Into Our Values
"The U.S. government has clear guidelines for autonomous weapons—they 
can’t be programmed to make “kill decisions” on their own—but no formal 
opinion on the ethics of driverless cars. Germany is the only country 
that has devised such a framework; in 2017, a German government 
commission—headed by Udo Di Fabio, a former judge on the country’s 
highest constitutional court—released a report
 that suggested a number of guidelines for driverless vehicles. Among 
the report’s twenty propositions, one stands out: “In the event of 
unavoidable accident situations, any distinction based on personal 
features (age, gender, physical or mental constitution) is strictly 
prohibited.” When I sent Di Fabio the Moral Machine data, he was 
unsurprised by the respondent’s prejudices. Philosophers and lawyers, he
 noted, often have very different understandings of ethical dilemmas 
than ordinary people do. This difference may irritate the specialists, 
he said, but “it should always make them think.” Still, Di Fabio 
believes that we shouldn’t capitulate to human biases when it comes to 
life-and-death decisions. “In Germany, people are very sensitive to such
 discussions,” he told me, by e-mail. “This has to do with a dark past 
that has divided people up and sorted them out.”
The decisions 
made by Germany will reverberate beyond its borders. Volkswagen sells 
more automobiles than any other company in the world. But that 
manufacturing power comes with a complicated moral responsibility. What 
should a company do if another country wants its vehicles to reflect 
different moral calculations? Should a Western car de-prioritize the 
young in an Eastern country? Shariff leans toward adjusting each model 
for the country where it’s meant to operate. Car manufacturers, he 
thinks, “should be sensitive to the cultural differences in the places 
they’re instituting these ethical decisions.” Otherwise, the algorithms 
they export might start looking like a form of moral colonialism. But Di
 Fabio worries about letting autocratic governments tinker with the 
code. He imagines a future in which China wants the cars to favor people
 who rank higher in its new social-credit system, which scores citizens 
based on their civic behavior."
The Paperback version of my Bloomsbury book "Ethics, Information, and Technology" will be published on Nov. 13, 2025; the Ebook on Dec. 11; and the Hardback and Cloth versions on Jan. 8, 2026. Preorders are available via Amazon and this Bloomsbury webpage: https://www.bloomsbury.com/us/ethics-information-and-technology-9781440856662/
Showing posts with label moral colonialism v. moral autonomy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label moral colonialism v. moral autonomy. Show all posts
Friday, January 25, 2019
A Study on Driverless-Car Ethics Offers a Troubling Look Into Our Values; The New Yorker, January 24, 2019
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