Showing posts with label regulations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label regulations. Show all posts

Sunday, September 24, 2023

How To Approach AI Adoption Ethically And Responsibly Within Your Organization; Forbes, September 24, 2023

 Rhett Power, Forbes; How To Approach AI Adoption Ethically And Responsibly Within Your Organization

"In order to take full advantage of everything AI technology has to offer, you must be careful and efficient when adding this technology to your organization’s processes. Luckily, you can do a few things to ensure a smooth and flawless transition. Here are four strategies that can pave the way for ethical implementation...

2. Remain up to date on all regulations.

In addition to establishing an AI ethics advisor, it is essential to remain current on the ever-evolving regulations surrounding the use of AI. As the technology advances rapidly, laws will be enacted to address ethical concerns and protect individuals’ rights. By proactively addressing potential problems related to privacy infringement or bias algorithms through adherence to regulations, organizations can foster a positive reputation while harnessing the benefits of AI innovation. Remaining current on all the regulations ensures your organization meets all legal requirements and industry standards.

Until legal requirements and industry standards are ironed out, you must aim to be as transparent as possible. “Currently, there is no way to peer into the inner workings of an AI tool and guarantee that the system is producing accurate or fair output,” says Tsedal Neeley, Naylor Fitzhugh Professor of Business Administration and senior associate dean of faculty and research at Harvard Business School. “As a consequence, leaders should exercise careful judgment in determining when and how it’s appropriate to use AI, and they should document when and how AI is being used. That way people will know that an AI-driven decision was appraised with an appropriate level of skepticism, including its potential risks or shortcomings.”"

Monday, January 24, 2022

Friday, May 21, 2021

Privacy activists are winning fights with tech giants. Why does victory feel hollow?; The Guardian, May 15, 2021

, The Guardian; Privacy activists are winning fights with tech giants. Why does victory feel hollow?

"Something similar is likely to happen in other domains marked by recent moral panics over digital technologies. The tech industry will address mounting public anxieties over fake news and digital addiction by doubling down on what I call “solutionism”, with digital platforms mobilizing new technologies to offer their users a bespoke, secure and completely controllable experience...

What we want is something genuinely new: an institution that will know what parts of existing laws and regulations to suspend – like the library does with intellectual property law, for example – in order to fully leverage the potential inherent in digital technologies in the name of great public good."

Wednesday, February 13, 2019

AI ethics: Time to move beyond a list of principles; Information Age, February 13, 2019

Nick Ismail, Information Age; AI ethics: Time to move beyond a list of principles

"AI ethics should be a universally accepted practice.

AI is only as good as the data behind it, and as such, this data must be fair and representative of all people and cultures in the world. The technology must also be developed in accordance with international laws, and we must tread carefully with the integration of AI into weaponry — all this fits into the idea of AI ethics. Is it moral, is it safe…is it right?...

Indeed, ‘an ethical approach to the development and deployment of algorithms, data and AI (ADA) requires clarity and consensus on ethical concepts and resolution of tensions between values,’ according to a new report from the Nuffield Foundation and the Leverhulme Centre for the Future of Intelligence at the University of Cambridge.

Organisations and governments need help, and this report provides a broad roadmap for work on the ethical and societal implications of ADA-based technologies."