Influence, Immersion, Intensity, Integration, Interaction: Five Frames for the Future of AI Law and Policy

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Influence, Immersion, Intensity, Integration, Interaction: Five Frames for the Future of AI Law and Policy. / Liu, Hin-Yan; Sobocki, Victoria.

Law and Artificial Intelligence: Regulating AI and Applying AI in Legal Practice. red. / Bart Custers; Eduard Fosch Villaronga . TMC Asser Press, 2022. s. 541-560 27 ( Information Technology and Law Series , Bind 35).

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Liu, H-Y & Sobocki, V 2022, Influence, Immersion, Intensity, Integration, Interaction: Five Frames for the Future of AI Law and Policy. i B Custers & EF Villaronga (red), Law and Artificial Intelligence: Regulating AI and Applying AI in Legal Practice., 27, TMC Asser Press, Information Technology and Law Series , bind 35, s. 541-560. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-6265-523-2_27

APA

Liu, H-Y., & Sobocki, V. (2022). Influence, Immersion, Intensity, Integration, Interaction: Five Frames for the Future of AI Law and Policy. I B. Custers, & E. F. Villaronga (red.), Law and Artificial Intelligence: Regulating AI and Applying AI in Legal Practice (s. 541-560). [27] TMC Asser Press. Information Technology and Law Series Bind 35 https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-6265-523-2_27

Vancouver

Liu H-Y, Sobocki V. Influence, Immersion, Intensity, Integration, Interaction: Five Frames for the Future of AI Law and Policy. I Custers B, Villaronga EF, red., Law and Artificial Intelligence: Regulating AI and Applying AI in Legal Practice. TMC Asser Press. 2022. s. 541-560. 27. ( Information Technology and Law Series , Bind 35). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-6265-523-2_27

Author

Liu, Hin-Yan ; Sobocki, Victoria. / Influence, Immersion, Intensity, Integration, Interaction: Five Frames for the Future of AI Law and Policy. Law and Artificial Intelligence: Regulating AI and Applying AI in Legal Practice. red. / Bart Custers ; Eduard Fosch Villaronga . TMC Asser Press, 2022. s. 541-560 ( Information Technology and Law Series , Bind 35).

Bibtex

@inbook{cba47f6a02b24223886dd9cab8821ee6,
title = "Influence, Immersion, Intensity, Integration, Interaction: Five Frames for the Future of AI Law and Policy",
abstract = "Law and policy discussions concerning the impact of artificial intelligence (AI) upon society are stagnating. By this, we mean that contemporary discussions adopt implicit assumptions in their approaches to AI, which presuppose the characteristics of entity, externality, and exclusivity. In other words, for law and policy purposes: AI is often treated as something (encapsulated by AI personhood proposals); as the other (discernible from concerns that human beings are the decision subjects of AI applications); and as artificial (thereby concentrating on the artefactual characteristics of AI). Taken together, these form an overly narrow model of AI and unnecessarily constrain the palette of law and policy responses to both the challenges and opportunities presented by the technology.As a step towards rounding out law and policy responses to AI, with a view to providing provide greater societal resilience to, and preparedness for, technologically-induced disruption, we suggest a more integrated and open-minded approach in how we model AI: influence, where human behaviour is directed and manipulated; immersion, where the distinctions between physical and virtual realities dissolve; intensity, where realities and experiences can be sharpened, lengthened, or otherwise altered; integration, where the boundaries between AI and human are being blurred; and interaction, where feedback loops undermine notions of linearity and causality. These pivots suggest different types of human relationships with AI, drawing attention to the legal and policy implications of engaging in AI-influenced worlds. We will ground these conceptually driven policy framing pivots in examples involving harm. These will demonstrate how contemporary law and policy framings are overly narrow and too dependent on previous comforting pathways. We will suggest that further problem-finding endeavours will be necessary to ensure more robust and resilient law and policy responses to the challenges posed by AI. ",
author = "Hin-Yan Liu and Victoria Sobocki",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1007/978-94-6265-523-2_27",
language = "English",
isbn = "9789462655225",
series = " Information Technology and Law Series ",
pages = "541--560",
editor = "Bart Custers and { Villaronga }, {Eduard Fosch}",
booktitle = "Law and Artificial Intelligence",
publisher = "TMC Asser Press",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Influence, Immersion, Intensity, Integration, Interaction: Five Frames for the Future of AI Law and Policy

AU - Liu, Hin-Yan

AU - Sobocki, Victoria

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - Law and policy discussions concerning the impact of artificial intelligence (AI) upon society are stagnating. By this, we mean that contemporary discussions adopt implicit assumptions in their approaches to AI, which presuppose the characteristics of entity, externality, and exclusivity. In other words, for law and policy purposes: AI is often treated as something (encapsulated by AI personhood proposals); as the other (discernible from concerns that human beings are the decision subjects of AI applications); and as artificial (thereby concentrating on the artefactual characteristics of AI). Taken together, these form an overly narrow model of AI and unnecessarily constrain the palette of law and policy responses to both the challenges and opportunities presented by the technology.As a step towards rounding out law and policy responses to AI, with a view to providing provide greater societal resilience to, and preparedness for, technologically-induced disruption, we suggest a more integrated and open-minded approach in how we model AI: influence, where human behaviour is directed and manipulated; immersion, where the distinctions between physical and virtual realities dissolve; intensity, where realities and experiences can be sharpened, lengthened, or otherwise altered; integration, where the boundaries between AI and human are being blurred; and interaction, where feedback loops undermine notions of linearity and causality. These pivots suggest different types of human relationships with AI, drawing attention to the legal and policy implications of engaging in AI-influenced worlds. We will ground these conceptually driven policy framing pivots in examples involving harm. These will demonstrate how contemporary law and policy framings are overly narrow and too dependent on previous comforting pathways. We will suggest that further problem-finding endeavours will be necessary to ensure more robust and resilient law and policy responses to the challenges posed by AI.

AB - Law and policy discussions concerning the impact of artificial intelligence (AI) upon society are stagnating. By this, we mean that contemporary discussions adopt implicit assumptions in their approaches to AI, which presuppose the characteristics of entity, externality, and exclusivity. In other words, for law and policy purposes: AI is often treated as something (encapsulated by AI personhood proposals); as the other (discernible from concerns that human beings are the decision subjects of AI applications); and as artificial (thereby concentrating on the artefactual characteristics of AI). Taken together, these form an overly narrow model of AI and unnecessarily constrain the palette of law and policy responses to both the challenges and opportunities presented by the technology.As a step towards rounding out law and policy responses to AI, with a view to providing provide greater societal resilience to, and preparedness for, technologically-induced disruption, we suggest a more integrated and open-minded approach in how we model AI: influence, where human behaviour is directed and manipulated; immersion, where the distinctions between physical and virtual realities dissolve; intensity, where realities and experiences can be sharpened, lengthened, or otherwise altered; integration, where the boundaries between AI and human are being blurred; and interaction, where feedback loops undermine notions of linearity and causality. These pivots suggest different types of human relationships with AI, drawing attention to the legal and policy implications of engaging in AI-influenced worlds. We will ground these conceptually driven policy framing pivots in examples involving harm. These will demonstrate how contemporary law and policy framings are overly narrow and too dependent on previous comforting pathways. We will suggest that further problem-finding endeavours will be necessary to ensure more robust and resilient law and policy responses to the challenges posed by AI.

U2 - 10.1007/978-94-6265-523-2_27

DO - 10.1007/978-94-6265-523-2_27

M3 - Book chapter

SN - 9789462655225

T3 - Information Technology and Law Series

SP - 541

EP - 560

BT - Law and Artificial Intelligence

A2 - Custers, Bart

A2 - Villaronga , Eduard Fosch

PB - TMC Asser Press

ER -

ID: 286565873