ČERNÝ, Michal, Radim ŠÍP and Denisa DENGLEROVÁ. The Principle of Non-Discrimination in the Infosphere: A New Ethics. In Human Centered Digitalization. 2019.
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Basic information
Original name The Principle of Non-Discrimination in the Infosphere: A New Ethics
Authors ČERNÝ, Michal, Radim ŠÍP and Denisa DENGLEROVÁ.
Edition Human Centered Digitalization, 2019.
Other information
Original language English
Type of outcome Presentations at conferences
Field of Study 50301 Education, general; including training, pedagogy, didactics [and education systems]
Country of publisher Austria
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
Organization unit Faculty of Education
Keywords in English Floridi, philosophy, philosophy of information; philosophy of education; AI; etics
Tags International impact
Changed by Changed by: RNDr. Michal Černý, Ph.D., učo 268947. Changed: 23/12/2020 11:08.
Abstract
The High-Level Expert Group on Artifical Intelligence (AI), which works at the European Commission, presented seven points that must be met in the European space by companies developing the artificial intelligence. Among the seven points that can be described as "a new laws of robotics" is the principle of diversity, non-discrimination, and fairness. It is not allowed to create artificial intelligence that could discriminate anybody. In Western culture, the ethical framework of reflection on non / discrimination is on a scale between two poles – deontology and consequence-based ethics. However, AI research shows that such a scale is traditionally formulated from the anthropocentric point of view, and thus does not adequately cover the transformations that our world is going through. Above all, it is unable to reflect: • phenomena of human cooperation with AI; • AI autonomous behavior; • responsibility in hybrid cognitive systems. Even the above-mentioned "the laws of robotics" have this anthropocentric ethical character. Our contribution is based on Lucian Floridi's information ethics, which emphasizes the need to include all entities that are capable of processing information and thus contributing to the formation of the infosphere. We propose principles of non-discrimination that can be extended from people to all inforgs (i.e. people as well as biotic and technical entities in the infosphere) and show what practical impacts such a change in ethical perspective can bring.
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