Later on, Asimov added the fourth law, which states that a robot may not harm humanity, or, by inaction, allow humanity to come to harm. But this does not cover social dilemmas, or situations, where the machine inevitably has to select between two evils. Recently, Nagler et al. (2019) proposed an extension of these laws, precisely for a world where artificial intelligence will decide about increasingly many issues, including life and death, thus inevitably facing ethical dilemmas. In a nutshell, since all humans are to be judged equally, when an ethical dilemma is met, let the chance decide.
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La révolution (à venir) de la spintronique : 5G, IA, IoT, processeur, stockage…
08/09/2020
Le 09/09/2020 à 05h 52
Merci pour cet article intéressant. Je ne connaissais pas du tout cette discipline.
Un député LREM veut faire référence aux lois d’Asimov dans la Constitution
16/01/2020
Le 16/01/2020 à 21h 59
Les lois d’Asimov sont au nombre de quatre. Extrait de Social and juristic challenges of artificial intelligence, Matjaž Perc, Mahmut Ozer & Janja Hojnik, Palgrave Communications:
Later on, Asimov added the fourth law, which states that a robot may not harm humanity, or, by inaction, allow humanity to come to harm. But this does not cover social dilemmas, or situations, where the machine inevitably has to select between two evils. Recently, Nagler et al. (2019) proposed an extension of these laws, precisely for a world where artificial intelligence will decide about increasingly many issues, including life and death, thus inevitably facing ethical dilemmas. In a nutshell, since all humans are to be judged equally, when an ethical dilemma is met, let the chance decide.