Are the EU's Ethics Guidelines too generic?
The ethics guidelines are generic enough to be applied to anything
published:
by Harshvardhan J. Pandit
article ethics interactive rant
published:
by Harshvardhan J. Pandit
article ethics interactive rant
These are the Ethics guidelines for trustworthy AI published by the European Commision. I found these guidelines to be very abstract, and thought of an exercise where we find other applicable terms that still work when we replace 'AI' with them.
: revert
Suggestions: technology, governance,
Trustworthy AI should respect all applicable laws and regulations, as well as a series of requirements; specific assessment lists aim to help verify the application of each of the key requirements:
- Human agency and oversight: AI systems should enable equitable societies by supporting human agency and fundamental rights, and not decrease, limit or misguide human autonomy.
- Robustness and safety: Trustworthy AI requires algorithms to be secure, reliable and robust enough to deal with errors or inconsistencies during all life cycle phases of AI systems.
- Privacy and data governance: Citizens should have full control over their own data, while data concerning them will not be used to harm or discriminate against them.
- Transparency: The traceability of AI systems should be ensured.
- Diversity, non-discrimination and fairness: AI systems should consider the whole range of human abilities, skills and requirements, and ensure accessibility.
- Societal and environmental well-being: AI systems should be used to enhance positive social change and enhance sustainability and ecological responsibility.
- Accountability: Mechanisms should be put in place to ensure responsibility and accountability for AI systems and their outcomes.