Legal dispositionism and artificially-intelligent attributions

IF 1 4区 社会学 Q2 LAW
Legal Studies Pub Date : 2023-02-15 DOI:10.1017/lst.2022.52
Jerrold Soh
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract It is conventionally argued that because an artificially-intelligent (AI) system acts autonomously, its makers cannot easily be held liable should the system's actions harm. Since the system cannot be liable on its own account either, existing laws expose victims to accountability gaps and need to be reformed. Recent legal instruments have nonetheless established obligations against AI developers and providers. Drawing on attribution theory, this paper examines how these seemingly opposing positions are shaped by the ways in which AI systems are conceptualised. Specifically, folk dispositionism underpins conventional legal discourse on AI liability, personality, publications, and inventions and leads us towards problematic legal outcomes. Examining the technology and terminology driving contemporary AI systems, the paper contends that AI systems are better conceptualised instead as situational characters whose actions remain constrained by their programming. Properly viewing AI systems as such illuminates how existing legal doctrines could be sensibly applied to AI and reinforces emerging calls for placing greater scrutiny on the broader AI ecosystem.
法律配置论与人工智能归因
传统观点认为,由于人工智能(AI)系统的行为是自主的,如果系统的行为造成损害,其制造商不容易被追究责任。由于该系统本身也不能承担责任,现有的法律使受害者暴露在问责制的空白中,需要进行改革。尽管如此,最近的法律文书还是确立了针对人工智能开发者和提供商的义务。利用归因理论,本文研究了这些看似对立的立场是如何被人工智能系统概念化的方式所塑造的。具体而言,民间处置主义支撑着关于人工智能责任、人格、出版物和发明的传统法律话语,并将我们引向有问题的法律结果。通过研究驱动当代人工智能系统的技术和术语,本文认为,人工智能系统最好被概念化为情景角色,其行动仍然受到其编程的约束。正确看待人工智能系统,可以说明现有的法律理论如何合理地应用于人工智能,并加强了对更广泛的人工智能生态系统进行更严格审查的呼声。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
38
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